Friday, November 29, 2013

...the brotherhood of man

This Time We Must All Be Filipino 




Stephen P. Groff
The Huffington Post

11/29/2013 
 

Just three weeks ago, millions of Filipinos felt the catastrophic strength of Super Typhoon Haiyan. What can I write in its aftermath that could help ease their agony? What can I possibly say that might lighten their load? Following my visit to Tacloban and surrounding areas, I know that there are no words that will alleviate their suffering; no literary unction that will sooth their pain. I can't pretend to understand the emptiness felt by someone who has lost a child, a parent or a loved one to this disaster by making false comparisons to disappointments I have experienced. Dime-store analogies will never do justice to the enormity of this loss. The only thing I can say is that I know the Philippines can overcome this tragedy and will be stronger for the experience.

My life is inextricably entwined with this country. In many ways, I owe my family and my career to the Philippines. I first came here over twenty-five years ago as a Peace Corps volunteer. Newly graduated from college, I was ready to impart all of my "wisdom" to a community of artisanal fishermen, only to find that I had much more to learn from them than they from me. This was my first introduction to the Filipino spirit and to the notion of "bayanihan". People who had very little didn't think twice about sharing it. The community always came together to help someone with a sick family member, to support someone else whose boat was destroyed by a storm or to repair communal dikes in the rice fields.

The Philippines has been my home for much of the time since. My wife and our two amazing children are Filipino. While aware of the challenges faced by a burgeoning middle-income country, we marvel at the beauty of this place and still spend many weekends in the village where I first lived as a volunteer. I may not look it but, deep inside, my heart is here -- Pilipino ang puso ko.

We have all seen how resilient this country is. Through war, typhoons, volcanoes, and earthquakes, the Filipino perseveres with a smile on his face and wonders if you'd like to eat, ready to share whatever she has. This is what will allow the country to overcome this tragedy -- the optimism and generosity of its people. This time though, we must all be Filipino. We must all share in that optimism and generosity.

In responding to this tragedy, the Philippines, paraphrasing Abraham Lincoln, must allow itself to be influenced by the better angels of its nature -- bayanihan, pakikipagtulungan, mapagpatawad and kaloob.

The rest of the world must accept the lessons from previous tragedies that we too often have stubbornly resisted. In a recent Washington Post piece, Vijaya Ramachandran and Owen Barder urge the world to "Let's help the Philippines -- but not like we helped Haiti".

 They acknowledge that the immediate aftermath of such disasters can bring out the best in the global community. But much remains to be learned from our response to disasters such as the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, particularly around transparency and accountability. The Government of the Philippines has made a strong push in this direction with the launch of FAiTH (the Foreign Aid Transparency Hub), an online portal of information on aid received in response to Yolanda.

Past experience shows that while responding to initial needs is often chaotic, study after study demonstrates that failing to support a strong national presence on the ground undermines the government's ability to lead the reconstruction effort, long after emergency responders have departed. This begins with the relief phase being anchored by strong national coordination of both domestic and international efforts. In short, the entire international community -- public, private and civil society -- must support the government's efforts to coordinate all phases of the response.

And what about concerned citizens? In an excellent piece in Slate, humanitarian worker Jessica Alexander urges the civically minded to "donate money -- not teddy bears, not old shoes, not breast milk." Her basic premise is that we need to curb our instinct to donate things, and instead donate money to those organizations that can best determine what things are necessary on the ground. Not only does money travel faster and cost less to move, there is less chance that it will end up unused.

Lastly, we should use the momentum created by this crisis to inject momentum into the fight against climate change. Naderev Saño, the chief representative of the Philippines at the Warsaw Climate Change Conference, pled with delegates at COP 19 on November 11 to "stop this madness". There is significant scientific evidence that the worst storms are getting stronger and that storm surges are compounded by sea level rise. The global community should use this event as an impetus for concrete, immediate action to address climate change.

For its part, my institution -- the Asian Development Bank -- is committed to supporting the country in response, recovery and reconstruction. We have already released a $3 million grant and will soon be releasing another $20 million grant and a $500 million loan to support reconstruction. While these funds will help, they represent only a fraction of our commitment to the Philippines. Two-thirds of our staff -- nearly 2,000 people -- are Filipino, many with a direct connection to this tragedy. The remainder are expatriates who have chosen Manila as a second home. Alongside our neighbors, thousands of us are contributing in a personal capacity to the ongoing efforts in the Visayas. We will do whatever is necessary to help get these communities back on their feet.

Now is not the time to point fingers or assess blame. Now is the time to work together -- to encourage global bayanihan -- to get assistance to those that really need it, and to do that in the context of understanding past failures and successes. Like my Filipino friends, I am an optimist at heart, and it is hard not to see a better future in the smiles I saw on the children of Leyte and Samar, children who have experienced more tragedy in their young lives than most of us do in a lifetime. The Filipino spirit is stronger than this event -- not only is it "waterproof", it is pessimist-proof as well.

Stephen P. Groff is the Asian Development Bank's Vice-President for East Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. This article first appeared in the Philippine Daily Inquirer and in Embassy Magazine.

...the PH cheerleader

Philippines places 3rd in cheerleading world championships
 
 
Sun Star
Friday, November 29, 2013



THE Philippines provided another milestone by taking two bronzes in the recently concluded 7th Cheerleading World Championships at the Impact Arena in Nonthaburi, Bangkok, Thailand.

Bannered by the 3rd PSC-Philippine National Games champions -- the University of the Philippines pep squad, along with teams coming from 3rd PNG co-champions from Centro Escolar University, St. Pedro Poveda College and the Zamboanga City Red Barons -- the nationals duplicated their bronze medal finish in 2011 with an aggregate score of 408.5 points in the Team Cheer event, behind repeat World Champions Japan with 517 points and hosts, Thailand, who also repeated their silver medal placing with a score of 496 points.

Philippines places 3rd in cheerleading world championships
Contributed photo

The first surprise bronze medal was captured by Philippines Team B, which was anchored by UP Pep squad members Audrey Munoz, Donina Ramirez and members Aaron Casurao, Leandro De Chavez, Nil Costales and Kim Parra. They surprised the highly favored teams from Russia, Slovenia and former world champions Chinese Taipeh with a score of 223 points.

Russia took home the gold in the mixed group stunts event, while Thailand Team A took the silver with 229.5 points.

The Philippine All Female teams who were in contention for a bronze medal before the start of the finals failed to gain momentum by and landed sixth (All female team, 268.5 points) and fourth place (All female group stunts, 124.5 points). Japan dominated both events followed by Germany and Russia.

The Cheerdance team was 7 points adrift of bronze behind Poland and Japan on the first day but couldn’t gain ground as they finished fifth with a total score of 343 points. Russia again flexed its muscle in this event followed by Germany and Poland.

In all, it was the best showing by the Philippines by far in the any international cheerleading competition since competing in the international stage in 2007. It augers well for programs of the Gymnastics Association of the Philippines, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary and the Philippine Sports Commission, which is embarking on mass-based program through the Batang Pinoy Games.

The team arrives in Manila today and will start in helping in the relief and rehabilitation efforts of the Typhoon Yolanda victims in the Visayas region. (PR)

 

Thursday, November 28, 2013

...the PH Q3 economic growth

PHL economy grows 7% in Q3, the fastest in Southeast Asia, says NSCB


November 28, 2013
 
 
The economy remained robust, growing at the fastest pace in Southeast Asia in the third quarter of the year on the back of increased investments, sustained government and consumer spending, and brisker trade, the National Statistical Coordination Board reported Thursday.
At a press briefing, NSCB Secretary General Jose Ramon Albert said output as measured by the gross domestic product (GDP) grew 7 percent in the third quarter, down from the 7.6 percent in the second quarter and 7.3 percent in July to September of last year.
Albert said the results in July to September pulled the GDP growth to 7.4 percent in the first nine months of the year, or above government's 6 to 7 percent target for the year.
At the same briefing, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Arsenio Balisacan said the country remains one of the brightest spots in region and will continue to do so for the rest of the year.
“We remain to be the fastest growing economy in the major economies of Southeast Asia... We are second to China,” said Balisacan, who is also National Economic and Development Authority director general, noting that China grew by 7.8 percent in the third quarter.
Despite the destruction wreaked by Typhoon Yolanda, the economic chief noted there is a strong possibility that the Philippines would meet its output goal for 2013, considering that all it takes would be 2.5 percent to 5.3 percent in growth in the fourth quarter for the Philippines to meet its output goal for 2013.

Eduardo Francisco, BDO Capital and Investment Corp. president, said in a text message, the latest GDP data "shows we have momentum and why investors should remain bullish on the Philippines.
"Relief efforts for Yolanda will continue and a lot of rebuilding in the form of investments will take place," he added.
Government officials, including Balisacan, earlier said the damage to crops, livestock, and infrastructure in the Visayas could shave nearly one percentage point from the full-year GDP.
“We still expect GDP for the full-year would come close to 7 percent,” Balisacan said.
“It's true that the destruction of physical, particularly private, capital is quite massive. The impact on the GDP is quite substantial [in the fourth quarter], but we have been growing so fast,” said Balisacan.

'Real economy has strong legs'

"The sustained expansions in investment spending and the manufacturing sub-sector continue to provide the needed boost to GDP growth," Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. said in a research note sent after the growth numbers were released.
In a separate note, Prakriti Sofat, Singapore-based economist at Barclays Plc., said the disruption" caused by Typhoon Yolanda pose downside risks to fourth quarter GDP, "but the impact should be manageable.
"While we expect disruption from the typhoon to impact growth in the fourth quarter, we think first half 2014 growth will a get a boost from reconstruction," she added.
“On the demand side, growth in the third quarter came from increased investments in fixed capital, reinforced by consumer and government spending, and the robust external trade,” NSCB’s Albert noted.
In terms of industry, manufacturing, and construction contributed much of the output in the third quarter, Albert said.

In a separate text message, Philippine Stock Exchange Inc. president Hans Sicat said the data is "encouraging news," placing the Philippines second to China in terms of economic growth in Asia.
"It's a positive signal that the real economy has strong legs, and should bolster the fundamentals that analysts and investors look for to participate in the capital market," he said.

The third quarter growth numbers were within expectations, Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry chairman Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. said in a phone interview.
 
"Slower growth was expected in the third quarter, but seven percent is still good," he said. "For the fourth quarter, the calamities could even spur expansion due to relief efforts, rebuilding."
 
On October 15, Central Visayas was rocked by a magnitude 7.2 earthquake, comparable to the strength of 32 atomic bombs. Typhoon Yolanda, with sustained winds of up to 315 kilometers per hour and gusts of up to 378 kph, barreled through Central Philippines on November 8, flattening towns and cities and affecting millions of Filipinos.
 
"Economists are projecting a dip in growth because of Yolanda... [but] the third quarter numbers will help our average for the year to still be good," BDO Capital's Francisco said. – With Danessa Rivera/VS, GMA News
 
 

...the Math wizzards in Taguig


Philippines bags 62 medals in 10th IMSO

 

Filipino elementary students took home 62 medals including three gold in the 10th International Mathematics and Science Olympiad (IMSO) for Primary School Students held in the country from Nov. 25 to 29.

Math, Science, Philippine studients, Manila Bulletin
Gold medalists (front row from left) Sanprem Taechawichian of Thailand, Stefan Marcus Ong and Steven Reyes of the Philippines, Stanve Avrilium Widjaja of Indonesia and Yu Chia Zhang of Singapore show their medals awarded by officials led by Mayor Lani Cayetano of Taguig (back row fourth from left). (Photo by Jonathan Hicap)


The IMSO drew contestants from South Africa, Thailand, Taiwan, Indonesia, China, India, Nigeria, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Kazakhstan, Brunei, Malaysia, and host Philippines.

The country won three gold, 18 silver and 41 bronze medals in the competition organized by Mathematics Trainers Guild-Philippines (MTG) under Dr. Simon Chua and the City of Taguig under Mayor Lani Cayetano in cooperation with the Department of Education (DepEd) and the Science Education Institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST-SEI).

The mayor and her husband Senator Alan Peter Cayetano, and DOST-SEI Officer-in-Charge Elizabeth Fontanilla led the awarding ceremony held on Nov. 28 at the Samsung Hall of SM Aura Premier at Bonifacio Global City in Taguig.

In Math, winners of gold medals for the Philippines are Stefan Marcus Ong and Steven Reyes of St. Jude Catholic School and John Henry Marquez of UP Integrated School.

Winner of silver medals in math are Wiliam Joshua King, Matthew Eric Tan, Audrey Sy, Marksen Viktor Lizarondo, Marjana Ysabelle Montanez, Eion Nikolai Chua, Fedrick Lance Lim, Maxinne Louise Dominique Co, Vanessa Ryanne Julio and Patrick Nino Policarpio.

Bronze medalists are Ken Rassel Isidro, Al Patrick Castro, Bryce Ainsley Sanchez, Kylee Wiona Sy, Ryan Jericho Sy, Genrish Wendell Ng, Vincent Paul Fadri, Hanna Jo, Hiraya Marcos, Naomi Anne King, Ma. Erin Daphne Raton, Albriz Moore Bagsic, Robert Gerard Uy, Elean Almazan, Vien Vicente Jio Viloria, Lance Andrei Esteban, Ellan Puerto, Allyana Coleen Reyes, Christopher Neil Defensor and Kristin Angela Narag.

In Science, the Filipino silver medalists are Hugh Angelo Sonon, Jernnex Mullaneda, Neil Joshua Patiag, Dion Stephan Ong, Katrina Laura Colasito, Joseph Ryan Ong, Lyra Winette Tamayo and Neil Martin Cantillana.

Science bronze medalists are Gabrial Joseph Pua, Laila Denise Dy, Sophia Marion Medina, Lance Kendrick Sebastian, John Ian Lenix Hingan, Justin Miguel Quismundo, Sean Marcus So, Jerome Pasia, Kathleen Ann Sison, Martie Angelica Bueno, Aleck Josef Aquino, Ma. Leibniz Charisse Parra, Ayeasha Alea Irabagon, Raymund Carlo Masbano, Joshua Alvarez, Sherwin Adrien Tiu, Monica Panti, Ashley Maive Butcon, Ryan Christopher Deodores, Marc Danielle Bas and Immanuel Josiah Balete.

In Math, Chen Xinyl of Singapore emerged as the overall top scorer while Master Papon Lapate of Thailand was best in exploration and Yu Chi Zhang of Singapore took home the best in theory award.

In Science, Kar Weng Sean Leong of Singapore won as the overall winner and Bowen Jiang of Singapore was best in experiment. Disanayaka Mudiyanselage Sumanasekara of Sri Lanka was best in theory.

Dr. Chua thanked Mayor Cayetano and city government of Taguig, Senator Cayetano and companies for their valuable support to the contest. The 10th International Mathematics and Science Olympiad (IMSO) was sponsored by PhilFlex Electrical Wires and Cables, Phoenix Publishing House, Petron, SM Supermalls, Federation of Filipino Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry Inc. (FFCCCII), San Miguel Corporation, Collins International Trading Corp., City of Taguig with the support from Senator Antonio Trillanes IV and the municipality of Alfonso, Cavite.

 

...The Azkals FIFA ranking

Philippines rises four spots anew to 133 in latest Fifa rankings


By Celest R. Flores
INQUIRER.net
 
 
MANILA — The Philippines rose four spots anew in the International Football Federation (Fifa) World Rankings, and remained the highest squad in Southeast Asia at 133.
 
From 137 last month, the men’s football squad kept up with its meteoric rise even after a 4-0 loss to United Arab Emirates and a 1-1 draw to India — both higher ranked teams.
 
The Azkals also kept their distance over the SEA teams with Myanmar at 140, Thailand at 142, Singapore at 154, Malaysia and Vietnam at 158 and Indonesia at 162.


 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

...the big music stars to PH


Beatles, Eminem, Lorde Donate To Philippines Compilation


Some of the word’s biggest bands have offered their songs on a compilation Songs For The Philippines, with artists, labels and publishers offering to donate proceeds from the release to the Philippines relief effort.

Out today, funds will be donated to the Philippines Red Cross who are working to provide recourses and establish essential services in devastated regions on the country following the super typhoon Haiyan.

As well as The Beatles, Eminem and Lorde, the album features Bob Dylan, U2, Adele, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Kings Of Leon, Muse and Lily Allen.

Buy the compilation on iTunes here, the full track listing is below:

The Beatles – Across The Universe
Bob Dylan – Shelter From The Storm
Michael Bublé – Have I Told You Lately That I Love You
U2 – In A Little While
Bruno Mars – Count On Me
Beyoncé – I Was Here
Eminem – Stan (Live from BBC Radio 1)
Cher – Sirens
Adele – Make You Feel My Love
Katy Perry – Unconditionally (Johnson Somerset Remix)
One Direction – Best Song Ever
Fun. – Carry On
Lady Gaga – Born This Way (The Country Road version)
Justin Timberlake – Mirrors
Justin Bieber – I Would
Alicia Keys – New Day
Imagine Dragons – 30 Lives
Madonna – Like A Prayer
P!nk – Sober
Kylie Minogue – I Believe In You
Enrique Iglesias – Hero
Red Hot Chili Peppers – Factory Of Faith
Linkin Park – Roads Untraveled
Kings Of Leon – Use Somebody
Muse – Explorers
Lorde – The Love Club
Josh Groban – Brave
Kelly Clarkson – Stronger
Paolo Nutini – Simple Things
Ellie Goulding – I Know You Care
James Blunt – Carry You Home
Pitbull feat. Christina Aguilera – Feel This Moment
Earth, Wind & Fire – Sign On
Apl.De.App – Going Out feat Damian Leroy
Sara Bareilles – Brave
Jessica Sanchez – Lead Me Home
Lily Allen – Smile
The Fray – Love Don’t Die
The Beatles – Let It Be

Monday, November 25, 2013

...the Miss Grand International 2013 runner-up

At Miss Grand International 2013… Philippines places 4th

 
 
By MST Entertainment
Nov. 25, 2013

ANNALIE Forbes finished as 3rd runner up at the first Miss Grand International pageant held in Bangkok on Nov. 19. Puerto Rican Janelee Chaparro won over 74 other candidates and took home a $30,000 cash prize and a paid apartment residence in Thailand for a year during her reign as spokesperson for the pageant’s ‘Stop the War’ campaign at the international level.
Annalie Forbes’ winning form that won her fourth place
Forbes, a 20-year-old lounge singer who was second runner up in the Bb. Pilipinas 2012 pageant was handpicked to represent the Philippines at the newest beauty pageant and duplicated Ariella Arida’s placement at the Miss Universe 2013.

Dominican Republic’s Chantel Martínez was first runner up, while while Slovak Republic’s Denisa Paseciakova and Australia’s Kelly Louise Maguire were the second and fourth runners up, respectively.
Miss Grand International Janelee Chaparro of Puerto Rico (center) with Annalie Forbes (Philippines), Chantel Martinez (Dominican Republic), Denisa Paseciakova (Slovak Republic) and Kelly Louise Maguire
In the final interview, Forbes answered the top five question, “What would you do to prevent war and global conflict?” with “As a beauty queen, I will use my position to promote the advocacy of Miss Grand International by using various instruments, such as social media, the pageant itself and if necessary, a personal presence to spread the wonderful message of peace by stopping war. Thank you Thailand and all the countries who donated for (sic) my countrymen. Maraming maraming salamat po, from the Philippines!”

Ali, as she is fondly called, was Miss Bulacan 2011 and is currently a first year Infotech student at STI. She started singing at age seven and idolizes jazz queen Ella Fitzgerald.

 She had her first solo concert Invincible in March 2013, which showcased her love for jazz and bossa nova. Her father is a taxi driver so she helps in supporting the needs of her family. – Eton B. Concepcion, Photos: Miss Grand International

 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

...The PacMan

Pacquiao dominates Rios, wins via unanimous decision

GMA News
November 24, 2013
 
 
He's still got it - Manny Pacquiao lands a right on his foe Brandon Rios. Tyrone Siu / Reuters

He's back.

In what could have been his swansong in boxing, Manny Pacquiao proved he still packs a mean punch, registering a unanimous decision victory against American Brandon Rios, Sunday at The Venetian Macau, claiming the WBO International Welterweight belt in the process.

Among the three judges, Michael Pernick scored it 120-108, while Lisa Giampa had it at 119-109. Manfred Kuchler gave Rios two rounds at 118-110.

It was total domination for Pacquiao, who pummeled Rios with a flurry of punches. He showed vastly greater hand speed than his opponent and landed blistering combinations that left Rios' right eye swollen and his left eye bleeding.

Though the Filipino was unable to score any knockdowns, he clearly frustrated his foe, who on several occasions swung at nothing but air as Pacquiao moved out of the way and returned fire before Rios could cover up.

Pacquiao landed 281-of-790 punches for 36 percent, while Rios connected with 138-of-502 punches thrown for 27 percent, according to CompuBox.

"Recovering from the knockout and giving a good show just like the young Manny Pacquiao," the Saranggani representative said after the win.

Pacquiao also shared that he was very careful this time around, avoiding a repeat of the result in his last loss against Juan Manuel Marquez:

"I'm very careful. I learned in the last fight."

[Review the fight, round-by-round]


After nearly a year away from the ring, the Filipino ring icon, who dedicated his win to victims of Super Typhoon Yolanda, showed he still has what it takes, as he took down the taller Rios.

"This isn't about my comeback," he insisted. "My victory is a symbol of my people's comeback from a natural disaster, a national tragedy. It's really important to bring honor to my country with this win."

The tone of the fight was set early and remained the same for all twelve rounds. Rios (31-2-1, 22 KOs) put his gloves high in front of his face in an attempt to block Pacquiao's blows, but the eight-time world champion threw so many punches that quite a few broke through to leave their marks on the American's face.

Showing deft footwork, Pacquiao would jab, turn swiftly to one side, land another punch and turn again.

On several occasions, one straight left would be followed by another, and then, having pierced Rios' defense, Pacquiao would open up with a barrage of four or five punches, to the delight of the more than 13,000 in attendance at the Cotai Arena in the Venetian Macao.

"All I can say is, many Manny punches," smiled Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach. "He fought the perfect fight. He let him off the hook. I wanted him to knock him out. But I was very happy with his performance."

Gracious Rios

Fight week had been marked by tension between the two fight camps, which culminated in Roach and members of the Rios team engaging in a scuffle on Wednesday morning but Rios was gracious in defeat.

"I got beaten by one of the best fighters in the world," he said. "He came with a game plan and he executed it. He's very fast and he throws punches from a lot of different angles. He's hard to fight against."

Pacquiao returned the compliments.

"My opponent was very tough," he said. "He is a strong fighter, and a tough fighter. Rios was not an easy opponent. He was one of the toughest opponents I've ever faced."

Following Pacquiao's December knockout against Marquez, there were questions over whether he could still compete at an elite level. Roach had hinted that defeat against Rios would be a reason for his fighter to retire. Victory, however, prompted a different response.

"This is still my time," said Pacquiao. "My time is not over."

Rios' trainer Robert Garcia agreed.

"Pacquiao still has it," he said. "He has quickness and great speed. He'll be around for a long time."

Hungry Pacquiao

Coming into the bout, Pacquiao described himself as hungry, following what was essentially a year away from boxing, after losing last December to arch-rival Juan Manuel Marquez via a sixth-round KO, and prior to that, a controversial split decision to Timothy Bradley.

That hunger manifested positively, as the Filipino congressman gave his Super Typhoon-struck countrymen something to cheer for.

Pacquiao dedicated his bout to the victims of Yolanda (international name Haiyan), and his fight was broadcast for free to security forces and aid workers, as well as the citizens, many homeless, of Tacloban.

It was not immediately known what Pacquiao's next bout would be, but it is possible that he will seek a rematch against Marquez, or see if Floyd Mayweather Jr. will finally rise up and face him, in a bout many boxing fans have long clamored for.

On the other hand, it is the second straight loss for 27-year-old Rios, who blazed into the limelight after registering 31 wins and a draw without a defeat, until losing his rematch against Mike Alvarado via unanimous decision last March for the Interim WBO Welterweight title.

It was Pacquiao's first fight outside the United States since winning at home against Oscar Larios in 2006. Celebrities were still on hand at The Venetian to witness the fight, including football superstar David Beckham, who was shown visiting Pacquiao right before the match. American Idol finalist Jessica Sanchez sang both the American and Philippine national anthems. — OMG/AMD/RAF, GMA News; with a report from Reuters by Kieran Mulvaney