Wednesday, April 27, 2011

...the mentor

Filipino-American educator named member of US task force



Photo
Dr. Ligaya Avenida
MANILA, Philippines—A Filipino-American educator has been named as a member of a panel of experts who will formulate uniform standards for recruitment of teachers in the United States.

Dr. Ligaya Avenida, a pioneer in bilingual education, will serve the newly-formed US Task Force on International Teachers, a joint initiative by the US Department of Public Health Services and the George Washington University.

“We are pleased at the invitation to the Task Force because as the recruitment of teachers and other professionals continue to grow, there needs to be some standards that will define many of the process and procedures and apply them consistently to everyone,” Avenida told INQUIRER.net in an email interview.

She said the task force hopes to address issues involving recruitment of teachers, including procedures, fees and the welfare of foreign educators hired to work in the US.

“The goal of the Task Force is to establish these guidelines so that we can eliminate many recruitment practices that do not help in the successful migration of Filipino professionals to the United States,” said Avenida, who worked for 30 years at the San Francisco Unified School District, rising from a teacher to assistant superintendent and director of the human resources office.

Avenida, executive vice president for recruiting and education of the US-based Jeepnee Inc., has been doing international recruiting for over 10 years.

“To date we have brought approximately 2,000 teachers to various school districts across the United States,” she said. “They are employed by the districts and are paid the same salary and benefits as every other teacher in the district.”

They earn an average of $40,000 to $65,000 per year depending on their education degree,  teaching experience and district salary schedule, said Avenida.

She said the terms of employment are tied to work visa and subject to renewal depending on work performance.

“There are a number of criteria for selecting and hiring of teachers, their educational degree, experience in teaching, knowledge of current best practices in teaching, attitudes, beliefs and a strong commitment to helping children learn,” said Avenida.

She said US education officials have high regard for Filipino teachers.

“(D)istrict administrators, principals and superintendents of schools have consistently praised the Filipino teachers for their competence and excellent work,” said Avenida, who founded the Avenida International Consultants when she retired from the district 10 years ago to address the shortage of teachers in Math, Science and Special Education across school districts in the US.

“Their work and accomplishments have been validated not only by their superiors but by their peers, through the teacher unions who have enthusiastically brought them into their membership and in the case of the teachers in Baltimore City Schools have even placed them in leadership positions in their organization,” she said.

Avenida welcomed the US move to formulate a recruitment standard for educators.

“Uniform standards for the recruitment of teachers are long overdue and are most certainly a step in the right direction, and I am proud to have been invited to serve on the Task Force and look forward to being an active participant” she said. With a report from Esther M. Chavez in San Francisco, California

...the choir

PHL choir wows crowd in Virginia


The Bukas Palad Music Ministry performed for their Filipino-American fans and American guests at the State Theater in Falls Church, Virginia. -- DFA website
A Philippine choir wowed Filipino-American fans during a concert at the State Theater in Falls Church, Virginia, USA, the Department of Foreign Affairs said.

The DFA said the Bukas Palad Music Ministry performed for their Filipino-American fans and American guests last April 17.

“The concert in Virginia was the last of an eight-concert tour of Bukas Palad in the United States and Canada in celebration of the group’s 25th anniversary," the DFA said in a news release on its website.

It said the group sang a repertoire of 21 songs including Filipino favorites like “Hindi Kita Malilimutan," “Tanging Yaman" and “Sa ‘Yo Lamang."

Relenting to the crowd’s demand, the group performed two more songs for the encore.

Bukas Palad is a group of young Filipinos who compose and perform original religious music, founded by three friends who started writing songs as high school students.

Its members are university students and young professionals who volunteer their time and remarkable talent to help and inspire others.

The group has so far recorded 15 albums and performed in over 100 concerts across the Philippines, Japan, Hong Kong and the United States.

International star and Tony Award winner Lea Salonga was among those who have recorded a Bukas Palad song.

The concert was organized by the Ateneo Alumni Charitable Foundation of Metropolitan Washington, D.C. — LBG, GMA News

...the coco water purifier

Coconut shells used to purify water

By ROY C. MABASA
April 27, 2011
Manila Bulletin
 
 
MANILA, Philippines — A professor from the De La Salle University (DLSU), in partnership with the Manhattan College in New York City, has helped develop a sustainable water purification system which uses indigenous biodegradable materials such as coconut shells to be introduced in Nagcarlan, Laguna in June.

DLSU Professor Susan Gallardo, together with Manhattan College Professor and Filipino-American James Patrick Abulencia, presented the water purification system at the just concluded National Sustainable Design Expo at the National Mall between 4th and 7th Streets, Washington DC which was organized by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as part of its Earth Day event.

This endeavor by students from the Manhattan College, under the tutelage of Gallardo and Abulencia, was made possible by a $9,990 grant from the EPA under its P3 Program (People, Prosperity and the Planet).

Through this EPA program, college students can benefit people, promote prosperity and protect the planet by designing solutions that move people towards a sustainable future.

The EPA considers projects that address challenges from a wide range of categories: agriculture, built environment, materials and chemicals, energy, and water. These can be challenges found in the developed or developing world.

The P3 Award competition is a two-phase team contest. For the first phase, interdisciplinary student teams compete for $15,000 grants. Recipients use the money to research and develop their design projects during the academic year. The final projects include a Phase I project report and a Phase II proposal.

This year's Expo showcased 55 teams of more than 400 college students from across the United States who presented their innovative solutions to environmental challenges.

Gallardo teaches Chemical Engineering at the DLSU while Abulencia recently participated in the Balik Scientist Program of the Department of Science and Technology (DoST).

Their team designed and developed a cost-effective and bio-degradable water filter using materials that are locally available and cost-effective for the local population.

The water system will be launched in June when Professor Abulencia travels back to the Philippines.


...the good neighbor

Korea willing to fund agri dev’t of idle lands


By BERNIE CAHILES-MAGKILAT
April 26, 2011
Manila Bulletin



MANILA, Philippines – South Korea has expressed interest in funding an initial 3,000 hectares of idle government lands in four provinces with corn and other crops to increase productivity in the country’s agricultural sector and ensure food security.




Trade and industry undersecretary Cristino L. Panlilio told reporters the project would be coursed through Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA).

According to Panlilio, there are an estimated 100,000-hectare of idle government agricultural lands but the program would start with an initial 3,000 hectares in the provinces of Isabela, Quirino, Aurora and Misamis Oriental.

“South Korea is offering a multi-industry clustering program on how to harness idle agricultural lands into productive resources,” Panlilio said.

The proposal was initiated by former South Korea Ambassador to the Philippines Choi Joong-Kyung.
“This is meant to increase the productivity of our agricultural sector in the remote areas including fishery and livestock production,” he said.

The program is one way to ensure food security in the country and to help reduce poverty incidence by making the country’s agricultural sector productive.

Panlilio said the government will have to conduct a review of all idle lands where the South Korean project can be implemented.

Three Philippine agencies are going to collaborate with project including DTI, Departments of Agriculture and the Environment and Natural Resources.

Panlilio said that the South Korean government has already invited Korean businesses to tie-up with Filipinos to develop the country’s agricultural sector but they need to present a ‘story line’ of success, thus the need to start with the initial 3,000 hectares in the four identified provinces.

For a 3,000 hectare sugar plantation, Panlilio said, it would require an investment of P270 million.

This project was conceptualized as early as 2009 and an inter-government agency was even created to handle it but it did not take off.

“We have to complete our studies,” he said.

...the Latin dance

Latinas to hold Latin Ball to help PH kids

04/27/2011

MANILA, Philippines - A group of Latinas based in the Philippines are organizing a charity ball to help raise funds for underprivileged kids in the country.

The Club de Damas Latinas (Latin American Women's Club) will hold its annual Gala Latina at Sofitel Philippine Plaza on May 7.

Dancers show what Latin dance is all about at the press conference for this year's Gala Latina.
Funds to be raised will be earmarked for the Holy Family Home Makati Foundation and the Eugenia Ravasco Day Care Center in Parañaque City.

"Beyond the music, fashion and food at every Gala Latina is actually a shared commitment and conviction by our members and partners to give back to our host country... We have a common heritage. The best way to thank our host country is to help them," said club president Yesika Reveilhac.

For several years now, the annual Gala Latina has been a source of funding for the two charity organizations. "We are proud to see the impact that the funds generated from the charity ball have on the progress of our beneficiaries' efforts and activities," said Reveilhac.

Sr. Luz Maria Buitrago, T.C., Superior and Directress of Holy Family Home Makati Foundation, said the Latin Ball "means a lot to us." She added that among the first ones to help them take care of neglected, abused, and orphaned girls were members of the Club de Damas Filipinas. They have been helping out since 1997.

"Their personal involvement also means teaching cooking, grooming, and a lot of other things to the children," said Sr. Luz.

The Ravasco Day Care Center, meanwhile, takes care of children aged 3-6 years old, providing them basic health care and education while their parents go to work. The club has been extending help to the day care center since 2007.

For the past 15 years, the club has been holding the Gala Latina, a formal evening gala of authentic Latin food, wine, music, and dance.

This year's Gala Latina will feature live performances by Salsa Manila and Cuban Style, with music by Onda Latina and DJ Jonathan.

Aside from the dancing, guests will also get the chance to win prizes in the raffle, and participate in a silent auction of prized items.

The Club de Damas Filipinas was formed in 1966 as the Latin Women's Club to gather women from Spanish-speaking countries in North and South America and Europe who are living in the Philippines. It currently has 75 members.

..the Garden of Eve

Filipino film about women wins in New York fest

By Marinel R. Cruz
Cebu Daily News
04/26/2011

“GANAP na Babae (Garden of Eve),” an indie film about women made by women directors, won the best in cinematography award at the recently concluded Soho International Film Festival in New York City.

Film producer Will Fredo accepted the trophy during ceremonies held at the Capitale in Manhattan on April 22. Fredo thanked cinematographers Myk Manalastas and Gym Lumbrera for their “valuable contributions.”

A total of seven awards were given, including a technical award called Mient’s pick, or excellence in cinematography, which was handed out for the first time that night.

“It was supposed to recognize the technical mastery of a movie, awarded by the film distributor Mient,” Fredo wrote in a Facebook entry shortly after the event. “I seriously thought the award would again go to Todd Bellanca (director of “The Bad Penny,” best feature award winner). When [our movie’s title was] announced, all of us were floored. With everyone in shock, I composed myself and thanked the SIFFNYC and Mient.”

“Ganap na Babae” presents three interweaving stories about Filipino women through the eyes of contemporary women directors Rica Arevalo, Ellen Ramos and Sarah Roxas: A prostitute (Mercedes Cabral) looks back on her life. Sweet potato farmer Elena (Jam Pérez) migrates to Japan as a mail-order bride, leaving her family to her sister Milagros (Sue Prado). A widow (Boots Anson Roa) falls in love with a younger man (Rome Mallari).

Club.Mov

“Ploy,” a Thai drama written and directed by TaPen-Ek Ratanaruang, is one of the featured films at the “Club.Mov: The Idiot’s Guide to Heartbreak 2” which opened April 25 and winds up tomorrow with a 9 p.m. screening at Mogwai Cinematheque, Cubao Expo in Quezon City.

Starring Thai actors Lalita Panyopas and Pornwut Sarasin, “Ploy” is about a middle-aged couple who question their seven-year marriage. The movie premiered at the Director’s Fortnight of the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. Thai superstar Ananda Everingham is featured in a supporting role as a bartender.

To be screened tonight at 9 at Mogwai Cinematheque is Khavn dela Cruz’s 70-minute film, “The Middle Mystery of Kristo Negro.” Admission is free.

‘Island-wide’ preem

“Deadline (The Reign of Impunity),” the latest advocacy film from the award-winning tandem of director Joel Lamangan and scriptwriter Bonifacio Ilagan, will have an “island-wide” premiere in Mindanao in July, according to line producer Dennis Evangelista.

The film discusses political characters in “blind item fashion,” based on real events, Evangelista told the Inquirer.

“Deadline” will have three special screenings on May 28 at Bantayog ng Mga Bayani in Quezon City. The College Editors Guild of the Philippines will hold screenings in June to coincide with National Freedom Week.

On July 23, the Alliance Against Impunity in Mindanao will sponsor simultaneous screenings in Davao, Cagayan de Oro and General Santos.

The film top bills Tirso Cruz III, Allen Dizon, Ina Feleo and Lovi Poe, with Jaime Pebanco, Raquel Villavicencio, Tony Mabesa, Richard Quan and the late John Apacible. Broadcasters Cheche Lazaro and Ted Failon appear in cameo roles.

Fete for ‘Lola’

Multi-awarded filmmaker Brillante Mendoza, whose “Lola” won best film at the Fajr Film Festival in Tehran in February, formally received his trophy recently from Iranian Ambassador Ali Mojtaba Rouzbehani in a short ceremony at the Summit Room of the Department of Foreign Affairs in Pasay City.

Veteran thespians Anita Linda and Rustica Carpio accepted their best actress trophies in person (as grandmothers living in the slums of Malabon who try to cope with the loss of their respective grandsons).

Also present at the event were professor/actor Rene Durian; Larry Castillo; Antonio Morales, executive director, DFA-Office of the Undersecretary for Special and Ocean Concerns; Virgilo A. Reyes Jr., assistant secretary, DFA-Office of Middle East and African Affairs; Hossein Divsalar, cultural counselor, Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran; and Generoso Calonge, senior special assistant, DFA-Office of the Undersecretary for Policy.

...the stimulus package

Strong stimulus to keep PH afloat

Yet food price hikes threaten country’s stability


By Daxim Lucas, Riza T. Olchondra
Philippine Daily Inquirer
04/26/2011

MANILA, Philippines—The Philippine economy will likely remain “resilient” for the rest of the year due to a strong agricultural sector and the multiplier effects of government spending, despite the threats posed by higher crude oil prices and the fallout of the natural calamities in Japan.

According to the local unit of Dutch banking giant ING, the Philippines can also weather the effects of the Japanese crisis, which may lead to a decline in dollar remittances from Filipinos working in the world’s third largest economy.

“The impact of the disaster in Japan, through the disruption of the supply chain and a more modest remittance level, could be temporary,” said Joey Cuyegkeng, chief economist of ING Bank in Manila.

Still, a 30-percent increase in the prices of international commodities this year may curb economic growth in the Philippines, Asian Development Bank (ADB) said.

In a study, “Global Food Price Inflation and Developing Asia,” ADB said a 30-percent rise in international food and Brent crude oil prices in 2011 could slow down the economy by 1.2 percentage points in 2011.

Even a 5-percent decline in food, and 3.1 percent drop in Brent crude oil prices will result in a slowdown of 0.9 percentage points in 2012.

“This is because the country is a large net importer of both food and Brent crude oil,” the report said.
Among ADB member-countries studied, Singapore, also a food and oil importer, is expected to suffer much, with its economy slowing down by about 1.5 percentage points in 2011, and 0.8 percentage points in 2012.

Global food prices grew 34.2 percent year-on-year in February 2011. At the same time, the price of Brent crude oil has gone up by 39.9 percent.

Movements in international prices have started to affect domestic prices in developing Asian economies. The increase in global food prices by close to 30 percent in January, translated to an average of about 10 percent food inflation in a number of regional economies, the report said.

ADB said increases in global Brent crude oil prices are relevant in analyzing food price shocks because movements in input costs such as fertilizer prices, irrigation with diesel pumps, and general transport costs closely follow those for energy prices.

Larger hikes in global commodity prices are expected to badly hit the gross domestic products of most developing countries in Asia.

In conclusion, the ADB said concerns over high prices would rise because inflation would erode the purchasing power of households, undermining the poverty reduction and human development gains of the government over the last decade.

“Simulation results suggest that a 10-percent rise in domestic food prices in developing Asia (home to 3.3 billion people) could push an additional 64.4 million into poverty, or lead to a 1.9 percentage point increase in poverty incidence based on the $1.25-a-day poverty line,” ADB said.

Also, ING’s Cuyegkeng said that although the country’s overall growth could slow down given the current circumstances, especially after what had happened in Japan, the resurgence in Philippine agriculture and the government’s decision to release funds right away could revitalize the economy and offset the impact of world events.

Recently, the National Statistics Office reported that exports rose at its slowest pace since November 2009. But Cuyegkeng said this merely reflected the “normalization of economic activity after ... the 2009 recession.”

Combined with the impact of the twin disasters in Japan last month, this may only have a “mild impact on the Philippine peso,” as overall dollar inflows from overseas Filipino workers’ and the business process outsourcing sector will likely “remain positive and more than cover the large trade deficit.”

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

...the singer's designer

Pinoy designer tapped to make costumes for US singer's video


By JULIEN MERCED C. MATABUENA
April 26, 2011

Oliver Tolentino (L) designed outrageous, Liberace-inspired costumes for 'male Lady Gaga,' Cee Lo Green  (Photos of Tolentino courtesy of fashionweekelpaseo.com and AP for Green)
Oliver Tolentino (L) designed outrageous, Liberace-inspired costumes for 'male Lady Gaga,' Cee Lo Green (Photos of Tolentino courtesy of fashionweekelpaseo.com and AP for Green)

MANILA, Philippines – Filipino designer Oliver Tolentino has been tapped by “Forget You” singer Cee Lo Green to design the costumes for the latter’s upcoming music video, “I Want You.”


In an interview published on abs-cbnnews.com on April 26, Tolentino said that Green’s stylist approached him for the project as “there are only a few people who can do these outrageous costumes.”


According to the designer, Green’s music video adapts a Liberace-inspired theme. The late Liberace was a successful American entertainer and pianist known for the flamboyant costumes he wears in his performances.

While the costumes were designed in Hollywood, Tolentino said these were all proudly Philippine-made.


“Everything he will be wearing were all made in the Philippines. Out of this world. Matutuwa talaga ang manonood,” he said.


The Orani, Bataan-native designed two costumes for Green. The first, as described by abs-cbnnews.com, was “a robin egg blue suit embellished with embroidery and Swarovski crystals” and highlights a turquoise “’furry’ overcoat made of Philippine raw silk cocoon from Aklan.”


“So makikita niyo sa video, angat na angat. Para siyang fur pero it's not,” he described.


The second costume was described as a “bright red suit embellished with gold embroidery, beads, and Swarovski crystals” that “features a Liberace-inspired cape of peacock fabric and gold embroidery.”


Aside from Green’s costumes, Tolentino designed dresses for the video’s “princess,” model Ivey Mansel.


The designer extended his thanks to his Filipino tailors, embellishers and cutters for making the outfits “very well.” He also reportedly personally attended to the shoot in Las Vegas and described working for the music video as enjoyable.


Tolentino recently made waves across the international fashion scene after holding a successful show in Los Angeles’ El Paseo Fashion Week last March, where he was cited its “Designer of the Week.” He is also the first Philippines-based designer whose clothing line has reached the USA, and is famed for the use of sustainable fabrics and other eco-friendly materials.

...the best bank automation


BPI gets best automation, networking award for Asia

The Philippine Star
 April 26, 2011


MANILA, Philippines - The Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and its partner Wincor Nixdorf have been awarded the Best Branch Automation and Networking Award in the 5th Asian Banker Technology Implementation Awards Program held at The Hong Kong Jockey Club last April 7.




The awards program was held in conjunction with the prestigious Asian Banker Summit 2011, the foremost annual meeting for decision makers in the financial services industry in the Asia Pacific region. BPI-ISG manager Sheryl G. Ngo Sy and BPI consultant Celestino Mendiola received the award in behalf of the bank.

The awards program, administered by The Asian Banker (TAB) and referred by prominent global bankers, consultants and academics, is the most prestigious of its kind. A stringent three-month long evaluation process, based on a balanced and transparent scorecard, determined the winners.

BPI won the award for implementing a project that automates data-encoding for transactions, optimizes the current branch network, and provides better customer experience. The project reflected its ability to leverage on existing infrastructure and channel distribution with a technology that automates and streamlines processes.

Previously, BPI had a problem of managing transactions that were growing at eight to 15 percent per year in its more than 830 branches nationwide. As a lot of the process was still done manually, transactions took a long time to be completed with long queue lines lowering the quality of overall customer experience.

The bank launched the customer transaction assist (CTA) project that enabled customers to encode transaction data and needed service on touch-screen machines.

This eliminated the need to use deposit, withdrawal and payments slips whose contents and figures may be misunderstood. Customers were also given queue numbers and were provided with an area where they can wait or where they can engage with other bank personnel.

When the project was fully launched after a three-month trial period, BPI has seen reduced waiting times for customers, lowered consumption of office materials, and increased opportunities for cross-selling.

“Apart from lower cost per transaction, the automation has improved customer experience by eliminating long lines and has allowed customers to interact with other bank personnel,” says Chris Kapfer, head of Asian Banker Research. The project is also notable for eliminating the back-office confirmation and revalidation that is needed to properly identify the figures in handwritten slips.

“BPI’s project with Wincor Nixdorf is a step forward for improving customer experience while leveraging on existing branch infrastructures. This clearly shows that an institution can increase its transaction capacity by automating operations, and eliminating redundant and often error-prone manual processes,” Kapfer says.

Over 50 financial institutions from 15 countries across the Asia Pacific, Gulf region and Central Asia were evaluated as part of the Technology Implementation Awards Program 2011.

The award evaluation process used a comprehensive methodology to evaluate the strength of individual technology implementations. It involved extensive research and tapped the combined experience of a team of experienced researchers and the expertise of an international panel of renowned industry practitioners.

...the bamboo car


Kenneth Cobonpue's bamboo and rattan car "a big hit" in Milan


Kenneth Cobonpue's Phoenix. Photo from Cobonpue's Facebook fan page.

(SPOT.ph) Filipino furniture designer Kenneth Cobonpue told Manila Bulletin that his Phoenix, the world's first and only car made from bamboo and rattan, was a "big hit" in Milan, Italy. It was showcased at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile during the Milan Design Week earlier this month.

According to Manila Bulletin, the Phoenix does not have an engine yet but it has caught the eye of the car industry. Cobonpue's managing partner in the US, Christopher Reiter, told Manila Bulletin that a visitor from Mercedes Benz was "amazed" by the design.

Reiter said, "He found the whole concept of a car made of bamboo and rattan so raw and yet so rich in terms of design and sustainability. Two other leading car manufacturers are also interested to pursue a collaborative project with Kenneth."  According to Manila Bulletin, Consul General Lourdes Soliman Tabamo lauded Cobonpue's work. In an intimate dinner she hosted in Milan for Cobonpue and his staff, she said, "This is a moment of national pride for all of us."

Manila Bulletin quoted Cobonpue as saying, "I am very pleased with the feedback from everyone who came to visit our booth and saw the intricacy of the craftsmanship and the genius of the Filipino design."

Inquirer.net likened the Phoenix to a sleek bird posed to take flight. "It has a (vertebra) or spine that runs to the rear where it forms into a splay of rattan bundled with LED (Light Emitting Diode) rods to emit light; that's the tail light. The rear is also the space for the car engine." It took months to design the Phoenix, and 10 days to build it in Cobonpue's factory in Cebu.

...the shoe maker

50 pairs of Pacquiao shoes to be released in Manila

04/26/2011
 
MANILA, Philippines - Fifty pairs of Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao's running shoes will be sold in Manila on Wednesday as a lead up to the boxing champ's next fight against Shane Mosley on May 7.

A lottery will be held for 50 pairs of Nike Trainer 1.3 Max at Nike Park The Fort on April 27, the sports apparel brand said in a statement released on Tuesday.


Ballots will be distributed starting 5 p.m. with the lottery to begin at 7 p.m.

Also set to be available starting April 27 are the Nike Zoom Huarache Low and other Pacquiao-inspired apparel.

Said to be designed for the "multi-sport athlete," the Nike Trainer 1.3 Max bears the signature "MP" logo on the tongue and includes the sports apparel brand's Flywire and Max Air technologies. Each pair is priced at P7,995.

It also features text and images associated with Pacquiao on the inside of every shoe -- from his boxing glove and the word "Kamao" to his well-known saying, "Don't tell God you have a big problem. Tell your problems that you have a great God."

"As Manny's daily running shoe, the Nike Trainer 1.3 Max provides a soft and comfortable ride after hours of rigorous, high-impact training in the gym," Nike said.

"With mesh zones for cooling, the shoe is ideal for year-round use in hot climates such as Los Angeles and General Santos, Philippines, where the Pacman has been training for his upcoming bout," it added.

Pacquiao signed an endorsement deal with Nike in 2007, making him the first Filipino athlete to promote the brand.

Among the products in the MP line are shirts, boxing shoes and jackets.

...the brainy move

DOLE chief: ‘Brain gain’ program in the works

To respond to the brain drain from the exodus of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), the government is planning a “brain-gain" program for returning OFWs, enhancing their skills and providing them with entrepreneurship opportunities.

Tentatively dubbed “Balik-Trabaho sa Pilipinas," the project will provide OFW returnees with the option to stay in the Philippines to work for better-paying jobs or to set up a lucrative business at home, according to Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz.

“The DOLE will also link up with labor, business, and other partners in providing an enabling and conducive environment that will encourage the return of our OFWs," said Baldoz.

She added that the program will also provide OFWs with real-time information on available jobs and labor market developments, accreditation, and permits for reemployment.

Baldoz said the measure belongs to the strategies outlined in the Philippine Labor and Employment Plan — which seeks to attain the goal of inclusive growth in the next six years, along with the Philippine Development Plan 2011-2016. — PE/VS, GMA News

...the Echo

Hollywood opens its doors to Echo

04/26/2011

MANILA, Philippines - The Hollywood red carpet is about to be rolled out for Jericho Rosales, whose film, “Subject I Love You,” will be screened at the Newport Beach Film Festival in Orange County in southern California at the end of the month.



Echo, as Rosales is fondly called in show business, could barely contain his excitement when talking about his movie, which will be screened alongside numerous films from around the world.

“Subject I Love You” is the only film from the Philippines that will be shown by Hollywood distributors.
Echo hopes this is another opportunity for Filipinos to make a mark in the international scene.


Echo added that gaining recognition in Hollywood has long been a dream for him, a dream he shared with “The Hunks” members earlier in their showbiz careers.

“The Hunks” was an all-male group composed of ABS-CBN matinee idols Rosales, Diether Ocampo, Carlos Agassi, Piolo Pascual and Bernard Palanca.

While the actor admits he is already feeling the jitters of the festival premiere, he is confident that “Subject I Love You” has a captivating story to tell that will catch the attention of the American audience.

The movie is a love story revolving around the “love” computer virus, which was developed by a Filipino that sent computer firms in a huge frenzy at the beginning of the decade.



Rosales shared he is already preparing to meet with Hollywood distributors.

Meanwhile, Rosales, who is now unattached, said he is not bringing a date to the red carpet event.

While the young actor may be solo on the love front for now, he hopes he will not be alone in supporting the movie as he asks for the support and presence of our kababayans abroad.

“Subject I Love You” will be screened on April 30 in Newport Beach, California.

Monday, April 25, 2011

...the boxers

2 Filipino boxers score big wins in Japan


By Ronnie Nathanielsz
Philippine Daily Inquirer


 MANILA, Philippines -- Two Filipino boxers, bantamweight Rolly "Matsushita" Lunas and super bantamweight Jonathan Baat scored big wins at the Sangyo Hall in Ishikawa, Japan on Sunday.


Lunas, the former Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation super bantamweight champion who also challenged WBA bantamweight champion Anselmo Moreno but dropped a 12-round decision in October 30, 2008, scored a 5th round knockout over undefeated Rasmanudin of Indonesia.

The 27-year-old Lunas improved his record to 28-8-1 with 16 knockouts while Rasmanudin, who suffered his first loss, fell to 13-1-2 with 8 knockouts.

Rolly "Matsushita" Lunas


Lunas who fights out of Japan lost his OPBF titler to Hiromasa Ohashi on June 21, 2009 and only fought again on November 20, 2010 when he won by a 1st round TKO over Pramod Sor Vorapin of Thailand.

The 30-year-old Baat scored a 6th round TKO over China's 27-year-old Ji Tao to win his 10th fight in a row after losing a 10-round unanimous decision to undefeated Japanese champion Kohei Ohba on October 14, 2007.

Jonathan Baat. Source: facebook.com

Earlier in Ratchaburi, Thailand, two Filipino boxers also broke the trend of losses in Thailand when rugged Larry "Bon Jovi" Canillas scored a stunning 9th round TKO over Pan Asian Boxing Association super bantamweight champion Sukkasem Kietyongyuth to hand the favored Thai his first loss while minimum weight Ivan Soriano won by a second round knockout over Durong Sor Vorasing.

Soriano who is managed by Dr. Rajan Yraola and is trained by Jun Agrabio dropped the Thai with a solid right hand in round two and the Thai referee counted him out.
With the impressive win, the 22-year-old Soriano improves to 9-1 with four knockouts.

In an action-packed bout, Canillas dropped Kietyongyuth early in the fight but the 23-year-old champion fought back gamely and caught Canillas with some solid blows of his own to get back into the fight to the delight of the hometown fans.

After a series of vicious exchanges, Canillas nailed Kietyongyuth with another explosive punch that floored the Thai champion for the second time in the bout.

Although Kietyongyuth fought back desperately, Canillas continued to hammer the champion until referee Jirawat In Eam stepped in and called a halt in the 9th round, giving the 22-year-old Canillas his first regional title and improving his record to 15-3 with 13 knockouts.

The 23-year-old Kietyongyuth suffered his first setback and dropped to 6-1 with four knockouts.

...the Pinoy "King"

Pinoy grabs lead role in Chicago staging of ‘King and I’

 
FORMER TANGHALANG Pilipino actor Jay Españo will be playing the lead role in a Chicago staging of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “The King and I” by the Drama Group.

He had auditioned for the role of Lun Tha “because I really like his love songs,” he says.

When the show’s director, Andy Leahy, asked him to read the king’s part, Españo credits his ignorance of any version of the musical (including the movie version) that landed him the part.

“I wasn’t stuck with the default stereotype as portrayed by Yul Brynner. I think there were moments in the reading that I made the king likeable and humorous, rather than making him a stern despot,” he says of the Thai monarch who is won over by English teacher Anna Leonowens.

He now travels 40 minutes every day to attend rehearsals.

“The Drama Group is 32 miles from the city where I live,” he says.

The long transits are not new to Españo as he’s been shuttling back and forth between Manila and Singapore for the past several years. He’s been visiting the US more often lately as part of his efforts to “go all-out global.”

Continuous learning

The Singapore chapter of his career began when he joined “Chang and Eng, The Musical.” Years later, he wrote, directed and produced “The Tales of Three Marias,” a show about Filipino domestic helpers living in Singapore, after interviewing over 50 of them.

Having won silver medals in the acting and singing categories in World Championship of Performing Arts 2008 hasn’t stopped him from continually taking classes to improve his craft.

He got hooked on yoga four years ago and even got a certification to teach it. His interest in movement was further piqued while taking his Musical Theater degree (on scholarship) at La Salle College of the Arts. “We had a class where we studied all kinds of movement philosophies.”

He was inspired to take a graduate degree in Laban Movement in Chicago. “Laban is a tool for observing and analyzing movement. The idea of the body being aware of incorporating space, time, weight and flow is astonishing to me. Being able to properly utilize your body is an excellent tool to have as an actor. Movement is an external manifestation of one’s inner behavior.”

“The trend now in most acting schools is gearing toward the studies of movement. Aside from Laban, you have yoga, Alexander technique, Feldenkrais, Suzuki method combined with Anne Bogart’s viewpoints and a lot more. Although they differ in technique, they all agree that one must be cognizant of their bodies to function efficiently in life.”

Españo credits Tanghalang Pilipino for instilling in him the importance of continuous study and “a high regard for discipline, which I still carry to this very day.” He joined TP as a scholar of the Actors Company, TP’s resident pool of actors, in the late ’90s.

Roots

“Everybody in the company was serious and dedicated in the craft. We had classes in the afternoon and rehearsals at night, different classes like movement class with Agnes Locsin, or improv with Anna Valdez-Lim and other teachers.

“My favorite and also most dreaded class would be Script Analysis with [TP founder] Nonon Padilla,” he says, laughing. “Each week we were assigned to read a play and analyze it in class. I would just sit there and listen to him for hours as he munched on peanuts while delivering his take on the chosen text of the week.”

Españo waxes nostalgic after noting that TP is celebrating its 25th anniversary.

“I miss working with TP people. I remember doing ‘Besa Me Mucho’ where I was required to dance the tango in a pair of red thongs in the intimate Tanghalang Batute. Most of the time, I’m more worried about memorizing my lines. That was the only time I was fussy over a costume or the lack of it,” he says.

He also recalls forgetting his lines during a long monologue in a performance of ‘Ang Ulo ni Pancho Villa.’

“I resorted to gibberish. Luckily my co-actors Olga Natividad, Joey Paras and George de Jesus picked up the cues pretty well,” he says, laughing.

Other projects

Españo is maximizing his time in Chicago by taking up improvisation classes at the renowned Second City. “Second City is the Harvard of improv theater. It’s where the likes of Tina Fey, John Belushi and Steve Carell came from.”

He’s now on his second year and learning music improv. “We learn how to make up songs while doing a scene. This is what they do on the TV show ‘Who’s Line Is It Anyway?’”

He will also be doing a dinner show with Miguel Vera in May; a Rizal musical in June; and a Rizal opera in November. “The musical and opera are for the 150th anniversary of Jose Rizal. And, hopefully, I will have a solo show in September.”

This production of “The King and I” is a limited performance for The Drama Group’s 80th anniversary. Filipino-Americans Randy Ballesteros and Nicole Dizon will play LunTha and Tuptim, respectively.

“The King and I” runs from April 29-May 1 at Bloom Theater, 101 W. 10th St., Chicago Heights, Illinois, US. Visit www.dramagroup.org.

...the Pinoy blades

Blades cleave to the hidden heart of Pinoy culture

To cleave to the heart of a culture, one might do well to study its blades.

Much can be gleaned about a culture by studying its blades, which reveal much about a people.

One look at a Viking hurstwic leads to an appreciation of the lumbering heft and blunt ferocity of those wacky bearded marauders. The broad double-edged blades of English tradition say as much about the values of the British Isles as the stiff upper lips Anglo-Saxons bandy about to this day. A Japanese katana speaks volumes about the sublime sophistication of the Nihon-jin (Japanese) as well as the confounding cutting edge of their circular logic.

In many countries that have a strong history of blade bearing – Great Britain, Italy, France, Japan, Indonesia – people drive on the left side of the road. It’s an instinctive thing, perhaps. Most sword-wielders are right-handed, and a right-handed swordsman wants oncoming traffic to approach on the weapon side.

America, on the other hand, has a history of firearm bearing. To a six-gun wielding pistolero, it matters naught whether a potential opponent approaches from his right or his left. Guns are just more agreeable that way.

Filipinos are bladed too!

And so the question remains: why do we Filipinos drive on the right-hand side of the road when ours is just as bladed a culture as Japan’s or Indonesia’s or Italy’s?

Let’s recall that ours is a culture whose national hero Lapu Lapu once slew an ill-advised Spanish interloper on the shores of Mactan.

But hey, without the Spanish, we wouldn’t have kare-kare (an iconic Filipino dish based on peanut sauce), so all is forgiven.

Talibung and Magellan

Contrary to public myth, the blade that slayed Magellan was likely not a Kampilan but a Talibung.

Per Pigafetta’s original account, Magellan was slain by a piece of bamboo whose tip had been hewn into a sharpened spear point, and what appeared to Spanish eyes to be some sort of cutlass.

One look at a kampilan shows that it in no way resembles a cutlass. A kampilan is a sword which sports a relatively straight profile.

Kampilan

Verbal curlicues aside, a cutlass is basically a sword whose blade is broad & curved. So is a talibung.

The cutlass (top) and the talibung (bottom).

See the similarity? Protective hand cover notwithstanding, the talibung’s blade bears a striking resemblance to that of the cutlass.

The talibung is rather common on the Philippine island of Panay, and has been used by jungle fighters since the time of Lapu-Lapu and probably immemorial too. When the Japanese occupied our sun-kissed shores, many a Filipino freedom fighter pitted his blade against the katana of his sloe-eyed foe.

Two other Filipino blades are noted for discombobulating many a katana-wielding invader within the tight confines of combat in steamy Philippine jungles – the pinute and the ginunting. Much to Japanese officers’ chagrin, their katana were so long as to be unwieldy in the tight quarters that is the bailiwick of the Filipino blade wielder.

Petal attraction of the pinute
Certain facets of Filipino mandirigma (warrior) lore have it that the pinute is so named for the whitish razor glint of its blade seen edge on.

Pinute

Were Ang Panday himself to wield a pinute, woe betide the Fernando Poe foe who glimpses the Panday’s pinute thus, for he would surely fall.

Purple prose and fatal attraction to one side for a moment, the pinute’s blade is curved and slightly leaf-shaped. The poetically-inclined might see the pinute as a petal of some demented flower.

Seen from the side, the blade waxes convex at its business end and grows narrower near the sword’s hilt. Some pandays fashion kamagong handles for the pinute’s hilt. Other smiths – show-offs doubtless – are said to use bone. Still others fashion the sword’s handle from other woods indigenous to Inang Bayan’s shores. Where hilt meets blade is usually a diminutive hand guard – self-respecting mandirigmas like their hands intact, thank you – and the Pinoy sword’s handle flares into a robust pommel: the better to pound sense into heads foolish enough to get within halitosis range with, of course.

Ginunting, half a pair of scissors

If a pinute arcs on the edge side, the ginunting’s blade boasts the converse. This equally noble short sword sports a concave edge and a concave arc on the back of the blade. It is wholly guaranteed to ruin anyone’s day.

Ginunting

So named because it resembles one half of a pair of scissors, the ginunting is employed to this day by Pinoy Force Recon Marines as they prey upon Abu Sayyaf insurgents and intrusive plant life alike. The official bladed implement of special Filipino Marines, the ginunting is weighted on its business end, making it ideal for cutting through recalcitrant shrubbery.

While in presidential terms past, noble foot soldiers were denied both ample ammunition and decent footwear alike, these fellows were at least accorded blades worthy of a warrior culture renowned in martial circles the world over.

Kampilan, another bad bad boy

The kampilan is the Filipino long sword, our answer to the Scottish claymore or the Japanese dai-to (literally, “long sword").

Distinguished by its relatively large size, the Kampilan is the heavyweight of Filipino blades. While Filipino pandirigma (warriorship) tradition is largely known for its use of short swords, the Kampilan is the exception that flew the coop. This Goliath among Filipino blades is usually 36 to 40 inches (90 to 100 cm) long.

Kampilan

The kampilan’s blade is narrow at the hilt and swells into a trapezoidal tip. Yes, geometry often ruins everybody’s day.

Kampilan blades sometimes sport holes near their tips. These are often filled with brass, albeit not the military kind, sadly.

Rare specimens exhibit kris-like fretwork, but sadly bear no relation to Baby James.

Although the kampilan can be used with one hand – by captains who lift barbells, perhaps? – this is, in mere mortal hands, best wielded with both of those hands.

At times the hilt was bound to one of the aforementioned hands by a talismanic piece of cloth. This was meant to prevent slippage. No self-respecting warrior enjoys dropping his weapon. It’s just too embarrassing.

Sometimes chain mail covering was employed to keep the hands free of injury. After all, if a weaponless hand is embarrassing, a handless arm is worse.

Virtually all of these bad boys boasted large metal staples which jutted from the cross guard above the sword’s hilt. Hilts were usually crafted from hardwood, but many a datu swaggered around with a kampilan whose wooden hilt was swathed in silver. The more dapper datus sported hilts encased in ivory or bone. For sure, supreme datus such as these were the life of every party. - YA, GMA News

Photo of pinute courtesy of www.traditionalfilipinoweapons.com. All other photos are copyright-free images from google.com.

...the 'balut' seller

A ‘balut’ seller visits Hong Kong

  
HONG KONG’S Statue Square is a legendary place for Filipino domestic helpers about to arrive in Hong Kong for the first time: Its reputation as a meeting place for the Filipino community is well-known. There are similar meeting places in other cities worldwide where overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) thrive.

Statue Square is an actual square with 1960s-styled fountains, seating and space located directly in front of the head office of architect Norman Foster’s futuristic-looking Hong Kong Bank building.

The main feature of the square is the “Black Man”—a statue of a long-forgotten Hong Kong Bank manager whose bronze statue was painted with a protective black sealant 12 years ago, thus, the name.

Statue Square is technically the area in front of the Hong Kong Bank building, but in parlance it refers to a wider area roughly bounded by the Filipino businesses found in Worldwide House, in the middle of Hong Kong’s Central Business District then moving around the Legislative Council building, through nearby Chater Garden, and spreading down toward Hong Kong Harbour, where the much-loved, now demolished old Star Ferry building was originally sited next to City Hall, still providing shade and shelter.

Bonus area

On Sundays and public holidays, the streets in this area—busy and congested on weekdays—are closed to traffic, a rare allowance to Hong Kong’s overseas workers and a hangover from the days of British rule.

These empty streets become a bonus area of pedestrian activity for Filipinos—rock concerts, prayer meetings, dancing, beauty pageants; cultural displays set up on temporary staging alongside picnics, gambling and casual meetings.

Remarkably the area, when filled with Filipinos, replicates a map of the Philippine archipelago. Different areas have their designated meeting places: The Ibalois of Benguet meet near the Black Man while those from Mindanao meet near City Hall.

Alwin Reamillo walked into this Sunday replication of the Philippines shouting “balu---t, balu---t!” doing his own artist performance as a balut seller.

His performance attracted little attention—he was, after all, performing in a place where activity of all kinds is common. Alwin had to compete with the itinerant photographer taking snaps and the phone-card sellers doing the rounds for those who couldn’t be bothered to walk to the nearby crowded Worldwide IDD shops.

He had to compete with prayer meetings and happy chatting and people just doing their usual Sunday routine.

Alwin’s performance replicated an earlier performance in Manila in 1999 for Ugnayan: Philippine International Performance Arts Festival. In true Reamillo style, it was embellished and extended into an eight-hour performance a week later at Hong Kong ArtWalk, a yearly one-night art event involving all Hong Kong galleries.

Alwin had a basket full of his own balut; duck eggs strengthened with plaster and emulsion and depicting a variety of scenes and maps of Hong Kong and the Philippines.

Vital artist

His balut have both a storytelling role and are objects of almost magical possession, something that could be honored and treated as an icon of mystical qualities. And in his basket he also has, for the genuinely hungry, a handful of real balut purchased in Wan Chai market, a place frequented by Filipinas to buy the shopping for their employers and a midweek meeting place.

As usual with Alwin’s work and seen on his balut, is a bouncing between cultures, historical events, locations, and a personal psychology that uncompromisingly draws on his background as the son of a Manila piano manufacturer; a graduate of the Philippine High School for the Arts and friend of other artists, writers and filmmakers; a long-time Australian resident and a well-traveled, respected and vital artist who dips in and out of the Philippines’ art world.

Talking with Alwin is always an event. With his photographic memory providing anecdotes and details, he has a raconteur’s knowledge of Philippine history, politics and a broad understanding of how it all fits in. Spirited conversations are long remembered for his wonderful diatribes, intransigence in the face of argument, and a circular confidence that the listener eventually realizes is drawn from an inner purity and passion.

Alwin lives and breathes and thinks art. The stimuli of the world and its history is altered and subverted with both humor and anger in every art piece he tackles. If, in the future, Alwin’s artistic output is placed end-to-end in art-retrospective style it will be a marvelous personal interpretation of Philippine history.

Communal work

Alwin’s recent work has revolved around large constructions and installation pieces. Often he works with communities (previously in the UK, New Zealand, Japan, Australia and the Philippines). He has directed the construction of helicopters and whales using found objects and, in what is evolving into a signature style, the use of crab shells. The community use of egg-shells will inevitably be a future and undoubtedly elaborate project.

Food has always featured prominently in Alwin’s art, this most basic of human needs being a lynchpin for Alwin the artist and an audience that can immediately relate to its subverted depiction and use in his work.

Pivotal in these community art projects is the communal preparation and eating of food. The crabs seen on the Thuringowa helicopter were communally cooked, eaten and prepared as art. Apart from being delicious fun to eat, it was a basic team-building exercise prior to working together.

His most ambitious project in this mold was the reconstitution of his family piano-making workshop with the original artisans brought together for the first time since the business closed over a decade ago. The results, a labor of love and devotion, are a series of pianos rebuilt into working order and improved by having their cases decorated by Alwin in his no-nonsense interpretations of Philippine history.

A related series of piano “wings” are simply beautiful objects. Alwin is renowned for his no-compromise-no-taboos attitude to art, so the beauty of these wings is a revelation.

Shamanistic performance

Last March, Alwin was the Hong Kong ArtWalk artist-in-residence for one month with a studio located in an industrial building overlooking the touristy Ocean Park.

The studio quickly became filled with found objects and a profusion of Reamillo ideas. The studio was almost too small to contain both! This quiet studio was the scene of great artistic energy and balut eggs rolled out, paintings painted and objects produced.

On the night of ArtWalk, Alwin tramped the streets yelling “balu---t, balu---t!” and Filipinas emerged from high-rise towers and doorways to see what was being sold.

The ArtWalk audience numbered 2,000 people. Alwin visited galleries giving in each a shamanistic performance involving cloth, incantations and mysterious circles and lines of carefully measured balut.

As a visitor here, an immigrant in Australia and, at times, a returnee to the Philippines and its art world, Alwin is often the outsider in his own performances.

After his Statue Square performance, he visited Hong Kong’s hub of Philippine commercial activity, Worldwide Plaza, with its Philippine supply stores, remittance centers, and cheap down-payment electronic shops. He was humbled by the frantic but incredibly poignant activity of the place.

Memories of that similar performance in Manila in 1999, and friends, growing up in San Andres Bukid, schooling in Makiling, and his recent decision to spend more time living in the Philippines rather than Australia, dwell in the cracks in this balut seller’s visit to Hong Kong.

John Batten organizes Hong Kong ArtWalk and writes about art, culture and heritage.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

...the Chinese Chery

China’s Chery eyes RP as car production hub


April 24, 2011
Manila Bulletin

MANILA, Philippines — Chery, one of China’s biggest car companies, is eyeing the Philippines as its production hub for left -hand-drive vehicles for export to ASEAN and other left-hand-driving countries.




Board of Investments managing head Cristino L. Panlilio told reporters that Chery representatives have informed him of the company’s plans to scale up its local presence, which is presently confined to mere distribution of its vehicles imported as completely built-up units.


Panlilio said the company was talking with the family of Elizabeth H. Lee, chief operating officer of Universal Motors Corp., for the new venture.





“They are planning to open a wholly-owned distribution center and assembly facility here,” said Panlilio, who also urged the Chinese carmaker to locate somewhere in Northern Luzon like Port Irene to support the BoI’s industry dispersal program and to decongest Manila.


Panlilio said that once they come in they would have to register as a new participant to the BoI’s Motor Vehicle Development Program.


Chery is one of the biggest car companies in China and the fifth biggest in terms of sales globally. It has a complete line of products from cars to trucks, buses and heavy equipment.


Once the Chery plan pushes through, it will be the third Chinese carmaker that is planning to assemble cars in the country.


There are already other Chinese cars being marketed in the country today including Lifan, Foton and Chana.

Based on the company website, Chery is China’s biggest homegrown carmaker, which is also making inroads with its more affordable and smaller car models.


On December 18th, 1999, the first Chery car rolled out the production line. In 2001, the Chery car was officially put into market and 28,000 cars were sold that year with only one model. In 2002, the output and sales of Chery cars exceeded 50,000 units, and it successfully ascended to be one of the Top Eight Manufacturers in China.


In 2006, the company sold 305,200 cars or 62% higher than the previous year and took up a 7.2% share in the domestic market and ranked No.4 in the Chinese passenger vehicle industry.

...the UN awardee

Cebu town wins U.N. award


April 24, 2011
Manila Bulletin

 CEBU (PIA) — San Francisco town in Camotes Island, Cebu has won the 2011 United Nations (UN) Sasakawa Award for Disaster Reduction. This was announced recently by Senator Loren Legarda, chosen in 2008 UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR) Regional Champion for Disaster
Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation for Asia-Pacific.

San Francisco’s Purok System in mobilizing local resources to address the vulnerability of its barangays was cited by government and non-government organizations and the UN as “very innovative” in creating local and practical solutions based on the communities’ unique needs.

...the Asian neighbors

ASEAN neighbors eyed as comm'l market for Filipino-made dengue-preventive device


By MELODY M. AGUIBA
April 23, 2011
Manila Bulletin


MANILA, Philippines – The government may open up commercial release of its dengue-preventive mosquito trap to nearby South East Asian neighbors, as this has regional market potential owing to its “organic” nature.

Programmed to already mass produce the ovicidal and larvicidal (OL) mosquito trap locally, a multi-governmental group expressed possibility of exploiting the intellectual property (IP) asset for the Filipino-developed device.

“We have an organic substance that can be used (for dengue control). So it has the greatest potential for global consumption. We’re proud to say that because other countries have attempted using synthetic products. But the Philippines embarked on something friendly and non-toxic,” said Dr. Lilian A. De Las Llagas, board of regents member of technology-developer University of the Philippines System, in a press briefing.

The OL trap has tremendous potential for commercialization not only among private companies domestically, but within South East Asia where countries have been plagued by dengue. This is a disease tagged by the World Health Organization (WHO) as the fastest-emerging infections and one for which no drug or vaccine has yet been developed.

The Philippines can then come in through this technology to explore its IP assets and somehow also establish commercial opportunities in the health sector.

Business entities are already interested in commercializing the technology.

“We will earn from royalties here because it’s a result of our R&D (research and development) budget,” said Industrial Technology and Development Institute (ITDI) Director Nuna Almanzor. “There are already people that inquired from us on how they can become adopters. They need to invest on the equipment to produce the OL traps since we’re just producing it from our laboratory now.”

The OL trap is highly marketable for its low cost of less than P10 per piece. The entire package consists of a strip of “lawanit” board that has the wet organic black paint that attracts the female, dengue-carrying female mosquito. The solution on the board has the pellets made from organic compounds derived from plants that are toxic to the mosquitoes, but not to human.

An advantage of the OL trap is its ability to prevent the disease, a move recognized by many countries to be a primary solution to this global disease.

...the President's paradigm


'Phl to rise from darkness'

By Aurea Calica
The Philippine Star
April 24, 2011  

MANILA, Philippines - President Aquino is optimistic that the country would be able to rise from darkness and the Calvary of corruption with the government and the people working together.

“I am one with the Filipino nation in celebrating the Lord’s resurrection from the dead as He saved mankind from sins,” he said in his Easter message released yesterday.

Aquino said the people should not waver in their faith in God and must continue following His lessons.

“This is the first Easter celebrated by the new administration,” he said.


“No matter how dark the episode we had been through, the advancement of honest and good governance, along with strong faith and cooperation, would be our foundation to overcome the Calvary that we have to deal with as we came in (government),” he added.

Aquino said the people must intensify charitable works to manifest God’s love and compassion.
“Let us continue to remember the real meaning of His great sacrifice,” he said.

“Each and everyone of us can contribute to the end of corruption to lift our people from poverty and difficulties. It is only through this that the people would feel the real light of change,” he said.
Aquino wished all Filipinos a peaceful and blessed celebration of Easter.

Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa Jr. said Easter should bring renewed hope and optimism to the people.

“Easter never fails to strike a note of triumph in our national soul. That is as it should be: The first resurrection event showed that the boulder that kept the Nazarene in death’s darkness was rolled away - and it delivered a powerful message: Christendom’s Christ can roll away our deepest problems,” he said.

“The message of Easter to us in these trying and challenging times is this: We can together roll away the boulder of problems that bedevil our national existence. Hope will replace despair, a sure sense of triumph will banish defeatism, and a regime of people’s well-being will overcome dehumanizing poverty. Good is stronger than evil, courage is mightier than fear, and light more powerful than darkness,” he said.

Binay: May Christ inspire Pinoys

Vice President Jejomar Binay is hopeful that the passion of Jesus Christ would inspire Filipinos, especially government officials, to serve fellow Filipinos out of “genuine love and selflessness.”

In his Easter message, Binay said the Filipino people would only realize the vision of a peaceful and prosperous Philippines through “unity and cooperation.”

“On Easter Sunday, I pray that the Passion of Jesus Christ would move us to offer ourselves for the sake of other people,” he said.

“May He inspire us to serve our fellow Filipinos out of genuine love and selflessness. Through our unity and cooperation, I know we will soon bring the vision of a peaceful and prosperous Philippines to reality,” he added.

Belmonte: Easter fulfilled God’s promise

Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said yesterday Easter is the fulfillment of God’s promise to redeem mankind from sin.

“It is the completion of the Messiah’s mission, His triumph over evil and conquest of death,” he said.

“It is the culmination of Christ’s suffering and passion, the affirmation of His Divinity, His infinite love for humanity, and the beginning of our life free from sin and under God’s mercy.

“This Easter, may we realize that our faith is built upon a love so powerful, one that compelled the Father to send His only begotten Son to deliver humanity from Sin; the same love that emboldened the Son to repudiate his own Divinity and fully embrace mortality, with all its failings and pains, that He may show the world the way to redemption.

“This Easter, May we be reminded of the fundamental pillar of our faith, and follow the teachings embedded in the life, death and resurrection of Christ. And may we be filled with courage to manifest and share the love that God has so generously bequeathed upon us, that we may carry on the mission that Christ, upon his ascension, entrusted to each of us,” he said.

Aquino pays respects to Ayala

President Aquino flew to Davao City on Maundy Thursday to pay his last respects to the late banana magnate and industrialist Jesus Ayala, who also served as the legislative liaison of his late mother, President Corazon Aquino.

Ayala was also Mrs. Aquino’s close adviser.

She sought Ayala’s advice before running for president in the 1986 snap elections.

Her son also consulted Ayala before he decided to run in the May 2010 polls.

Aquino said he was hoping to pay Ayala a visit before he died last Tuesday.

“I was hoping to somehow visit him and I was hoping my schedule would allow me until I received a text message telling me that he’s gone,” he said.

Aquino arrived on board a private plane at around 11:15 a.m. and immediately proceeded to the Ayala residence at Juna Subdivision, where he stayed for two hours and 30 minutes.

Aquino was actually expected to depart for Manila at 12:30 p.m. However, he stayed till 2 p.m. at the Ayalas and spent another 30 minutes mingling with military and police officials at the Technical Operations Group before finally flying out.

Aquino was accompanied by his sister Pinky during his visit. His two other sisters Ballsy and Viel paid their respects to Ayala the day before.

Ballsy said Ayala was like a father to them as his advice was always sought by the family.

Aquino described Ayala as “always a good person” who was always helping “the entire clan” even during the time of his mother.

“He was always giving without expecting anything in return,” he said.

Aquino said he felt a bit guilty that he might have also added to the stress of Ayala who was already ill at the time that his advice was sought.

Aquino said that when he ran for senator in 2007, he already had a network of support in Luzon and the Visayas but hardly any in Mindanao.

“So if I’ve been making any inroads there, it was because of the trust, confidence and efforts of people like Tito Chito,” he said.

Aquino said Ayala was the linchpin during the presidential polls last year.

“You would miss the presence of people who are ‘positive’ unlike others who are more pasanin (burden),” he said. “His comforting presence will surely be missed.”

Ayala owned and founded the JVA Group of Companies that has under its wings a number of agriculture companies such as Eden Fruits and Farm Products, banana plantations, as well as leading tourist destinations in Davao City such as Eden Nature Resort, Buenavista Island Resort, High Ponds Resort and the MTS Entertainment Complex.

Ayala was considered to be the “father of development” in Southern Mindanao since he served as Regional Development Council chairman for a rather long time.

Ayala’s close affinity with the Aquinos also paved the way for his having led the “Yellow Friday” movement in Davao City against the Marcos administration.

Aquino cited Ayala’s continued development work even after his illness started to affect him. - With Jose Rodel Clapano, Jess Diaz, Edith Regalado