Saturday, October 22, 2011

...the young environmentalist for special kids

Filipino student wins world environment award

By Tarra Quismundo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
 
 
From left: Muli of Kenya, Mary Jade Gabanes of the Philippines, Maria Rosa Reyes Acosta of Ecuador, Sarah Ervinda Rudianto of Indonesia and Michael Preuss, head of Corporate Policy and Media Relations, Bayer AG Communications


LEVERKUSEN, Germany — For promoting environmental education among children with special needs, a Filipino student won the Bayer Young Environmental Leader Award Thursday night here (early Friday in Manila) along with three other young environmentalists from around the world.

Mary Jade Gabanes, 19, a Special Education major at the West Visayas State University won the top prize with delegates from Kenya, Indonesia and Ecuador.

Winners will receive project support from the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and global company Bayer, which have been jointly implementing the youth program since 1998.

Gabanes hopes to inspire others to take better care of the environment by showing that special needs children could do the same despite their limitations.

“If you see special needs children doing something for the environment, wouldn’t we take a second [look] at ourselves and ask what we can do?” said Gabanes in an interview moments after her win here.

A panel of judges composed of representatives from UNEP and Bayer picked the winning projects out of 18 top country winners from across Asia, South America and Africa.

Gabanes’ project engages special children aged 12 to 22 in environment-themed sessions, from arts and crafts, using recycled materials to performing environmental songs, at a locally supported special education center in her native Iloilo City.


CHAMPION OF SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN. Mary Jade Gabanes on a street in Cologne, where she was invited as one of 47 participants the Bayer Young Environmental Envoys' week-long excursion around Germany. Cris Raymund Viray


The articulate and animated Gabanes impressed judges at final presentations on Wednesday, responding to questions about her project without pause.

When one judge asked how she coped with the known challenges of teaching special children, Gabanes said: “I’ve never had a problem. I’ve always had a soft spot for special needs children.”

Bayer flew in winning environmental envoys from around the world for an exposure trip around Germany, engaging them in discussions on trends in environment protection, experiments in Bayer laboratories and site visits around Cologne and Leverkusen.

Aside from Gabanes, three other Philippine envoys were invited to the field trip: Reymart Canuel of the University of Baguio who designed a website called “GreEnitiative” which aims to raise awareness on forest conservation;

Cris Viray of the St. Paul University of Quezon City who organizes youth environmental camps and training programs in his native Rizal; and Alfie Desamparado of the West Visayas State University who wrote and performed 10 original environmental songs in bus and boat terminals in Guimaras and Iloilo.

Delegates from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia, Peru, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Thailand, Venezuela and Vietnam participated in the youth conference.

Some 550 students from around the world have been invited to visit Germany since the program started 13 years ago.

...the rocker engineers in Seoul

Pinoy rock band bags 3rd place in South Korea tilt


"GmuSKa," a rock band composed of Filipino engineers, bagged third place in the recent "SUPEX Got Talent" competition in Seoul, Korea.

GmuSKA was the only Filipino entry in the talent competition that was part of SK Engineering and Construction's (SKEC) "Be the One" festival on October 14.



The band was composed of engineers:



  • Jonas Puig (vocal/guitar);


  • Fabiolito Fenecios Jr. (guitar/backing vocals);


  • Rommel Maglaki (guitar/backing vocals);


  • Reynan Rebusora (bass), and


  • Marvin Duran (drums).

    They won the competition with their own rock 'n roll renditions of New Order's "Bizaare Love Triangle" and the Freddie Aguilar classic "Anak."

    GmuSKa is the only Filipino entry in SUPEX Got Talent that featured 10 groups of talented performers.

    Frontman Puig told GMA's Youscoop.tv that the band was formed in August this year when the members joined an SKEC club called "SKoolman."


    YouScooper and GmuSKa frontman Jonas Puig takes the spotlight as the band performs at the "Be The One" festival

    The club "consists of musically inclined SKEC employees," he said.

    He added that they are the first Filipinos to join the music club.

    Puig said their band GmuSKa was formed not only for the competition but to foster friendship among its members who share the same passion for Pinoy Rock.


    Rock band GmuSKa poses with fellow Filipino engineers who cheered them on during their performance at the "Be The One" festival in Seoul, South Korea

    The band members counts as their inspiration their 70 fellow engineers working at SKEC.

    Puig said they hope to keep performing as a Pinoy rock band to "show everyone that Filipino people are globally competent, top caliber individuals not only in the field of engineering and construction but also in music and arts." - VVP, GMA News







  • ...the UN Citizen Ambasasador

    Pinoy in Dubai wins UN Citizen Ambassadors contest

    A 22-year-old Filipino working in Dubai was one of the three winners of the United Nations’ (UN) challenge to pitch a world-changing idea to “Mr. Secretary-General" Ban Ki-moon in only half a minute.


    According to the UN, Jonathan Eric Defante, 22, was one of this year’s “Citizen Ambassadors" for suggesting that plastic bottles can be reused to build communities around the world.


    Defante’s entry, “One Bottle, One Life," was picked by a panel of experts from the UN among 600 videos, along with:
  • “In Our Way, In Our Time" by Sigin RĂ«nwa Ojulu, 20, from South Sudan / USA; and

  • “Let’s Empower Youth" by Sergio (Mario) Valdez, 19, from Guatemala.

    This year, citizens had to begin with “Excuse me, Mr. Secretary-General" before giving their short statement on what they think “needs to be done to make this world a better and safer place."

    The three winners will meet with UN Secretary-General(delete) Ban Ki-moon in their trip to the UN Headquarters later this year.

    Aside from meeting the secretary-general, the winners will also:

  • be taken on a special VIP tour of the headquarters;

  • receive a personal certificate for a two-year designation as a Citizen Ambassador; and

  • attend briefings on humanitarian issues.

    Their videos will also be screened “at high-level UN meetings."

    ‘Bottle’ idea

    In his 30-second video pitch, Defante, an engineering graduate, urged Ban Ki-moon to “create a model community in every nation made out of used plastic bottles or ‘Eco Bricks,’" which can be built by the people themselves as a source of income.

    “The communities can be organized into cooperatives to enable them to sustain their livelihood for years to come, changing lives one bottle at a time," he said.

    Defante began his pitch by stating that 2.7 million tons of plastic bottles, or more than 75 percent, end up in landfills—a reflection, he said, that “the message across the globe about recycling is not strong enough."

    The eldest child of an overseas Filipino worker and a special education teacher, Defante is currently based in Dubai, where he works as a sales associate.

    He earned a degree in electronics and communication engineering (ECE) from the Mapua Institute of Technology last year.

    Defante was a member of the Mapua team that won in the Basic category of the 2009 Cisco Networking Academy Skills Competition.

    ‘Citizen Ambassadors’

    The Citizen Ambassadors campaign was launched in 2009 by the UN Department of Public Information, inviting people “to directly engage with decision-makers" through YouTube.

    Participants who are at least 18 years old are asked upload their video response—spoken or subtitled in either English or French—to an assigned topic or question.

    The contest is part of Ban Ki-moon’s initiative to utilize the Internet and social networking to give citizens a voice in many diplomatic issues.

    For the past two years, UN had citizens react to:

  • the Millenium Development Goals (2010); and

  • to the question “If you had the opportunity to speak to world leaders, what would you say?" (2009).

    Five individuals were named honorary “Citizen Ambassadors" in 2009, while six were chosen last year. - VVP, GMA News


  • Thursday, October 20, 2011

    ...the (university) President

    Fil-Am UP grad is new Seton Hall University president

    Filipino-American Dr. A. Gabriel Esteban was installed as president of Seton Hall University (SHU) in the United States, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said.


    Esteban was appointed as the first Fil-Am and first Asian-American president of the 155-year-old Catholic university in South Orange, New Jersey in January this year but was installed only last October 14.

    In a news release, the DFA said Esteban is also the university's first lay or nonpresident in a generation.

    Esteban was born in the Philippines and graduated from the University of the Philippines, where he earned two degrees: Bachelor of Science in Mathematics and Master in Business Administration.

    Esteban also received a doctorate in administration from the Graduate School of Management of the University of California at Irvine and a master of science in Japanese business studies from Chaminade University in Honolulu.

    He also received specialized training in leading transformation and change at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education

    In his investiture address, Esteban narrated the personal and professional journeys that brought him to SHU.

    He also challenged the university to continue to "promote understanding of its rich Catholic intellectual tradition and to encourage deepening of faith among the members of the university community."

    During the investiture ceremony, the Philippine flag was paraded along with the US flag and the banners of Seton Hall University and its various schools and colleges.

    Filipino-American students belonging to the Filipino League at Seton Hall also sang the Philippine national anthem.

    During the giving of gifts to Esteban, Newark Archbishop John Myers, Seton Hall's board of trustees chairman and president of the board of regents, presented him with a Bible printed in Tagalog.

    The Philippine Consulate General to New York said in a news release, "As president of the university, he has set the goal of raising 'Seton Hall's academic profile to rank among the top 10 Catholic universities and top 100 national universities among college-bound high school students' in the U.S. by the next decade."

    As president, Esteban oversees more than 900 faculty, and 1,800 employees and nearly 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students.

    Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose Cuisia Jr. and Philippine Consul General to New York Mario de Leon Jr. attended the installation rites for Esteban.

    "This is a historic day for Seton Hall University. Dr. Esteban has brought a big honor for the whole Filipino-American community, especially given the fact that his investiture coincides with the celebration this October of the Filipino-American History Month in the U.S." Cuisia said.

    De Leon, whose consular jurisdiction includes New Jersey, described Esteban as a "great inspiration to Filipino Americans."

    "His accomplishment as the first Filipino-American to become a president of a major U.S. university - and of the very prestigious Seton Hall University at that - should bode well for our community," he said.

    A good strategist

    According to his biography posted on the SHU website, Esteban spearheaded the University’s strategic planning and campus master plan initiatives.

    Before assuming leadership positions at Seton Hall, among the positions that Esteban held were:
  • provost and dean of faculty at The University of Central Arkansas;

  • dean of the College of Business and tenured professor of marketing at the University of Central Arkansas;

  • chairman of the Conway (Arkansas) Area Chamber of Commerce and of the Women’s Shelter for Central Arkansas;

  • associate vice president of academic affairs at Arkansas Tech University;

  • assistant professor at the University of Houston-Victoria.

  • fulltime instructor at the College of Business Administration of the University of the Philippines.

    SHU said Esteban also served American higher education in various national roles, including membership on the Accreditation Review Council of the Higher Learning Commission and work as team chair and consultant-evaluator.

    Seton Hall

    Seton Hall's 58-acre campus is located in South Orange, New Jersey, about 30 minutes away by train from New York.

    SHU is home to eight schools, over 60 majors and about 10,000 students.

    SHU was founded in 1856 by Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley and is the oldest US diocesan university under the Archdiocese of Newark. - VVP, GMA News

  • ...the PH chess masters in Jakarta

    Pinoy wins 3rd in Indonesia Open Chess

    10/20/2011
    So settles at overall 6th

    MANILA, Philippines – Filipino Grandmaster (GM) Oliver Barbosa settled for 3rd overall in the Indonesia Open Chess Championship at the Le Meridien Hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia on Wednesday.




    The Taytay, Rizal-based Barbosa tallied 6.5 points on 4 wins and 5 draws in 9 outings, but took 3rd after a superior tiebreak over 4th place GM Vladislav Tkachiev of France, 5th place GM Wang Yue of China, 6th place GM Wesley So of the Philippines and 7th place GM Aleksey Dreev of Russia.

    Barbosa failed to bring home the championship trophy after settling for a draw with GM Dreev in the final round.

    GM Darwin Laylo, who brought down Sofyan Jafar of Indonesia, finished in a tie for 8th to 14th places with 6 points. -- By Marlon Bernardino

    Wednesday, October 19, 2011

    ...the Brewers on X-factor

    Young Fil-Am duo makes it to 'X-Factor USA' Top 17



    By JULIEN MERCED C. MATABUENA
    October 19, 2011
    Manila Bulletin

    The Brewer Boys' Twitter bio currently reads, 'a Fil-Am brother's duo whose passion for music started really early! X-Factor USA Top 32! here comes newgrass' (L-R:Justin and Nathan. Photo courtesy of swrnn.com)
    The Brewer Boys' Twitter bio currently reads, 'a Fil-Am brother's duo whose passion for music started really early! X-Factor USA Top 32! here comes newgrass' (L-R:Justin and Nathan. Photo courtesy of swrnn.com)


    MANILA, Philippines – “The X-Factor USA” season one recently unveiled its top 17 finalists, which includes Filipino-American brothers Justin and Nathan Brewer a.k.a. The Brewer Boys.


    Prior, there were 32 contestants in all divided into four groups and mentored by an “X-Factor” judge: Girls (Simon Cowell), Groups (Paula Abdul), Over 30s (Nicole Scherzinger) and Boys (L.A. Reid). The Brewer Boys were part of the Groups block.


    The Brewer Boys performed Rihanna’s “Only Girl in the World” at judge Paula Abdul’s home before her and celebrity guest Pharell during the Judges Homes episode aired Oct. 13 (US time). The seventh and eighth episodes showed the contestants making their final performances at their respective mentor's houses before the top 17 contenders were announced Tuesday.


    Other songs previously sang by the Brewer Brothers were the Plain White Ts’ “Rhythm of Love” during their audition in LA and a joint performance of Snow Patrol’s “Chasing Cars” with their Groups co-members during the Bootcamp episode.


    Justin (17 years old) and Nathan (14) hail from Temecula City in California’s Riverside County. According to a tweet on their official Twitter account posted Oct. 15, their mother was from Manila while their grandfather was from Cebu.


    Apparently, the bluegrass/pop duo has already been performing in gigs since it was formed five years ago.

    In an Oct. 11 article posted on Southwest Riverside News Network’s official website, operating partner Christina Spellman of Spelly’s Pub and Grille in nearby Murrieta City said that the brothers “have been playing here since we opened a little over a year ago.” She added that they hold their performances on the “second or third Saturday of every month.”


    In a separate interview on the same website, Nathan described the “X-Factor” experience as “a thrill ride.”

    “Going through everything has brought us together more as a duo and as brothers. I think this competition has opened many opportunities for us. It’s just exposure,” he was quoted as saying.


    Meanwhile, the other 16 contestants are Simone Battle, Drew Ryniewicz, Tiah Tolliver and Rachel Crow for Girls; Josh Krajcik, Dexter Haygood, LeRoy Bell and Stacy Francis for Over30s; and Brian Bradley, Phillip Lomax, Chris Rene and Marcus Canty for Boys. With the Brewer Boys in the Groups block are Lakoda Rayne, InTENsity and The Stereo Hogzz.


    However, due to a last-minute decision made by judge Simon, the supposedly 16 finalists became 17 after Melanie Amaro of the Girls group was added.


    The contenders are slated to have their first ever live performance of the season on Oct. 25. “The X-Factor USA” airs every Wednesday and Thursday evening (US time) on FOX.


    ...the Pinoy Indie films

    Filipino Express’ in Tokyo fest


    By: Bayani San Diego Jr.
    Philippine Daily Inquirer


    EUGENE DOMINGO in "Ang Babae Sa Septic Tank"


    A special section on Pinoy movies, all products of Cinemalaya, is included in the 24th Tokyo International Film Festival which runs from from Oct. 22 to 30.

    “Filipino Express” features Sheron Dayoc’s “Halaw,” Jobin Ballesteros’ “Colorum,” Jeffrey Jeturian’s “Bisperas” and Marlon Rivera’s “Ang Babae sa Septic Tank.”

    “Bisperas” and “Septic Tank” are also competing in the Winds of Asia-Middle East section.

    Country of honor

    Meanwhile, six Filipino films were featured in the nine-day 28th Bogota (Colombia) International Film Festival, concluded on Oct. 18. The Philippines was “country of honor” at the fest.

    In the lineup were Remton Siega Zuasola’s “Ang Damgo ni Eleuteria,” Alvin Yapan’s “Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa,” Sherad Anthony Sanchez’s “Imburnal,” Albert Martinez’s “Rosario,” Jerrold Tarog’s “Senior Year” and Joel Lamangan’s “Sigwa.”

    “Rosario” and “Sayaw” competed for the top prize.

    Also, several other Pinoy indies made it to three festivals in Germany, according to programmer Axel Estein.
    In September, Quark Henares’ “Rakenrol” was shown at the Asian Hot Shots in Berlin.



    The 27th Interfilm Festival, set in Berlin next month, will feature three shorts—Mikhail Red’s “Inosensya” (international competition), Henry Frejas’ “Hanapbuhay” and Nico Hernandez’s “Tatang” (Focus Southeast Asia section).

    The 24th Exground Film Festival in Wiesbaden also next month will present Milo Tolentino’s “Niño Bonito” (international on-video competition) and Jade Castro’s “Zombadings 1: Patayin sa Shokot si Remington” (News from Asia).

    ...the FIFA ranking

    Azkals improve in latest FIFA rankings

    10/19/2011
     
     
    MANILA, Philippines - The Philippine Azkals improved in the latest FIFA rankings after a busy October wherein they played 5 matches.
     
     
     


    The Azkals are now ranked 158, up 8 places from their ranking last September.

    The Azkals participated in the Long Teng Cup this October, where they finished in 2nd place after ending up in draws with Hong Kong and Taipei, and defeating Macau 2-0.

    They also lost to Singapore in a friendly, 0-2, but bounced back against Nepal, 4-0.

    The Azkals' Under-23 team will participate in the South East Asian Games (SEAG) in November, while the senior team is now on a break with most players going back to their clubs.

    Spain remains number 1 in the rankings, followed by Netherlands, Germany and Uruguay.

    ...the educator

    Ilongga educator conferred the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit award


    By TARA YAP
    October 19, 2011
    Manila Bulletin

    ILOILO CITY, Iloilo, Philippines — The chairperson of the John B. Lacson Foundation Maritime University (JBLFMU) has been awarded the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit.






    Dr. Mary Lou Lacson-Arcelo was given the Nordic award for “outstanding service in the interests of Norway” by Norwegian Ambassador Knut Solem.

    Solem recognized the JBLFMU through Lacson-Arcelo’s “sterling leadership” as one of the world’s leading maritime educational institutions that have produced competent seafarers serving on board Norwegian ships sailing worldwide.

    Solem also emphasized that because of the efforts of Lacson-Arcelo, the relationship between the Philippines and Norway have been strengthened with the common tradition of seafaring.

    Meanwhile, the Norwegian ambassador challenged the JBLFMU to improve even further its academic standards to enable its graduates to be highly qualified in the international shipping industry.

    Earlier this year, the Norwegian Maritime Foundation of the Philippines Inc. disclosed that the world shipping industry is facing a looming global shortage with approximately 50,000 competent seafarers needed. The shortage is expected to double by 2015.

    Lacson-Arcelo assured the Norwegian ambassador that the JBLFMU will continue to be among the top maritime educational institutions with the capacity to produce competent cadets and officers with its academic policies.

    The institution currently enforces a strictly high-standard screening policy which requires a 70% passing rate for students enrolling in its maritime courses.

    Dr. Ronald Raymond Lacson Sebastian, JBLFMU chief executive officer, also disclosed that the university maintains a linkage with the Norwegian Training Center to integrate the latest maritime technology in training cadets to be at par with international standards.

    ...the Bicol beauty

    Bicolana beauty off to China on Thursday, vows to promote PH

     
    By ROBERT R. REQUINTINA
    October 18, 2011
    Manila Bulletin
     
     
    MANILA, Philippines — Bb. Pilipinas-International Dianne Necio hopes to promote the Philippines as a popular and friendly destination in the world when she leaves for Chengdu, China on Thursday to compete in the 2011 Miss International beauty contest.



    “It’s the warmth and hospitality of the Filipinos that makes our country a good destination,’’ Necio said, during an emotional send-off for the beauty queen, held at the Gateway Suites, Araneta Center in Cubao, Quezon City Tuesday.

    She was also cheered by fellow beauty queens 2011 Miss Universe 3rd runner-up Shamcey Supsup, 2010 Miss Universe 4rd runner up Ma. Venus Raj, Bb. Pilipinas-Tourism Isabella Manjon, 2011 Bb. Pilipinas 1st runner-up Janine Togonon; 2011 Bb. Pilipinas 2nd runner-up Mj Lastimosa; and 2010 Miss International semi-finalist Patricia Hernandez.

    She will be spending 17 days in China for the pageant preliminaries and hopes to shine her best at the coronation night on November 6.

    Necio, 19, said that she is not in any way pressured with the recent winnings of other beauty queens in international pageants or the reported territorial row between China and the Philippines in the West Philippine Sea.

    Asked to comment on the issue, Necio said: “I think I am not in a position to answer the question because our government is doing its best to solve the issue. And I think that the two countries have already made an agreement about it.”

    Necio said that Supsup has been a great help. “Sabi sa akin ni Shamcey, dapat huwag daw ako ma-intimidate. Just believe in yourself. Tapos binigyan niya ako ng tip tungkol sa ibang candidates because some of them also competed in Miss Universe.”

    At the send-off event, Necio became teary-eyed when her brother Daniel showed up in the press meet.

    It would be recalled that their father passed away weeks after she was crowned Bb. Pilipinas-International at the Araneta Coliseum last April.

    A veteran of beauty pageants in the Bicol Region since she turned 15, Necio is a sophomore nursing student at University of St. Anthony Iriga City in Camarines Sur. She stands 5’ 5-1/2” and weighs 116 lbs. Her talent and hobbies include basketball, baton twirling, badminton, and watching movies.

    Her stint in the Bb. Pilipinas beauty pageant was a memorable one.

    Last year, Necio finished first runner-up to Bb. Pilipinas-Universe Ma. Venus Raj who later placed 4th runner up in the 2010 Miss Universe beauty pageant in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    When Raj was briefly dethroned due to citizenship issue, Necio and Nicolette Henson were considered to represent the Philippines in the Miss Universe beauty pageant.

    Both, however, failed to make it to the contest due to age requirements. Raj eventually represented the country in the prestigious beauty contest.

    This year, Necio won one of three major titles along with Bb. Pilipinas Universe Shamcey Supsup who later placed 3rd runner-up in the 2011 Miss Universe pageant in Sao Paulo, Brazil last month.

    If Necio wins the Miss International pageant next month, she will be the fifth Filipino to win the crown. The Philippines ranks second for the most number of winners in the Miss International pageant with four – 1964, 1970, 1979 and 2005.

    Tuesday, October 18, 2011

    ...the Shakespeare stars

    Fil-Ams to star in Shakespeare play 'Twelfth Night


    Asian Americans, including Filipino-Americans, will star in a play, Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," at the Arclight Theater in New York in the United States.

    The play will be the inaugural production of Leviathan Lab, an Asian American professional creative studio.

    The play will run at the Arclight Theatre at 152 West 71st Street, Level 1 between Broadway and Columbus Avenues in Manhattan from November 3 to 19.


    Tina Chilip

    
    Jojo Gonzales
    
    The production will star Filipino-American Tina Chilip (Flipzoids, Joy Luck Club) as "Viola," and OBIE Award-winning actor Filipino-American Jojo Gonzalez (The Romance of Magno Rubio, “The Smurfs," and “PanAm") as "Feste the Clown."

    The play will be under the direction of Nelson Eusebio III (Assistant Director, All’s Well That Ends Well, The Public Theater/NYSF’s Shakespeare in the Park 2011).

    "Leviathan Lab is the new kid on the block," Chilip said. “I’m very excited to be a part of this company that is focused on creating innovative Asian American theater, and I can't wait to see what they do next."

    Gonzales, on the other hand, said, “It’s great that Leviathan Lab is pushing for more opportunities for Asian American artists."

    "When I first started out, it was hard for an Asian American actor to get cast, and perform in classical plays. The opportunities were few," he said.

    "It was unimaginable to even produce Shakespeare with an entire Asian American cast, let alone set the production in a place like Hong Kong unless it was ‘experimental’. I’m glad that Leviathan Lab is continuing this movement, and I’m having a ball being a part of it," he added.

    Aside from Chilip and Gonzalez, the "Twelfth Night" will feature:

  • Kurt Uy as Orsino,

  • Eileen Rivera as Olivia,

  • Andrew Eisenman as Malvolio,

  • John Roque as Sir Toby Belch,

  • Marcus Ho as Sir Andrew Aguecheek,

  • Karen Tsen Lee and Ka-Ling Cheung as Maria (alternating weeks),


  • Chris Doi as Sebastian, Roger Yeh as Fabian, and Eugene Oh as Antonio.









  • ...the goddess advocate

    Venus Raj is spokesperson for UN program

     10/18/2011
    Venus Raj poses with mothers and children who joined the solidarity walk for Tingog 2015.


    MANILA, Philippines - Miss Universe 2010 fourth runner-up Venus Raj was chosen to be the spokesperson for "Tingog 2015," an integrated SMS and online citizen feedback initiative supported by the United Nations Millennium Campaign and Social Watch Philippines.

    The program was launched in Albay province of the Bicol region on Monday, making it the first of its kind in the country and in Southeast Asia.

    Raj, who grew up in Bicol, said Tingog 2015 (which means "voice" in Bicolano) will help ordinary citizens inform local government agencies when services are not delivered to them.

    The feedback gathered by the technology platform will be used by the local government to ensure responsiveness in development planning.

    "Sobrang laking tulong kasi sabi nga kapag simpleng pamilya ka... iisipin mo 'yung kakainin nila sa araw-araw 'yung pinapaaral, 'yung basic needs ng mga anak mo, at least kung merong ganitong proyekto, may sasalo na sa ganong pangangailangan," Raj said.

    Tingog 2015 aims to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, which range from ending poverty and hunger to providing universal primary education, by 2015.

    The Philippines' major telecommunications firms are working to make "2015" as the official number for sending citizen feedback.

    Other countries that have launched their own version of Tingog 2015 include Kenya and India. -- With a report from Jose Carretero, ABS-CBN Albay

    Monday, October 17, 2011

    ...the future Pinay diplomat

    Filipina student shines at Australia diplomacy college



    10/17/2011

    Michelle Leonardo with Gareth Evan, chancellor of the Australian National University

    CANBERRA, Australia-- When Michelle Leonardo graduated with a Master of Diplomacy at the Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy (APCD) of the Australian National University (ANU). She was pleasantly surprised to receive the James Ingram Prize for Excellence in Diplomatic Studies for foreign students. It was unannounced and took place at the smaller APCD get-together after the formal graduation ceremonies attended by hundreds of graduates at the Llewellyn Hall at ANU’s School of Music.

    Leonardo is not new to receiving awards. She came to Australia on a scholarship grant under the Australia Leadership Awards (ALA) program of the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID) in 2009, which includes full tuition, stipend, and as an ALA scholar, a series of leadership training, coaching and work placement in Australia.

    Diplomacy was also not her first postgraduate degree. It was only after finishing her Graduate Diploma and Master degrees in Environmental Management and Development at the Crawford School of Economics and Government – where she also received the Elspeth Young Prize for Social Contribution to Environmental Management and Development in 2010 – that Leonardo decided to apply for a scholarship extension of another six months to take the Master in Diplomacy program She also holds a Bachelor of Arts in Development Studies from the Ateneo de Manila University in 2005 and a Certificate in Project Planning, Development and Management from the Asian Institute of Management in the Philippines.

    Student life in Canberra
    In her last attendance to a meeting of the Philippine Studies Group, a forum of academics, students, other Filipino community members and friends at ANU, Leonardo was asked to give a short message to current and incoming ANU Filipino students.

    Leonardo said simply that one does not need to work hard to prove one's self in the international student community, but at the same time, she tried to enjoy every single day of her stay in Australia. She emphasized the importance of creating and maintaining genuine relationships with other students, as they help each other attain their academic goals.

    During her two-and-a-half year's stay at ANU, Leonardo was also an intern at ANUgreen, the university’s environmental management office. At the office, she conducted a preliminary assessment of the options available for a carbon offset scheme at the university.

    She was also an academic tutor at the Tjabal Indigenous Higher Education Centre, where she assisted Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islanders. Yet, she also found time to be a facilitator several times for pre-departure training of AusAID’s Australian Youth Ambassadors for Development (AYAD) program.

    Feminization of diplomacy
    Professor William Maley, APCD director, announced two female winners of this year’s James Ingram Awards, Leonardo and Australian student Kate McCallum. Both women received special awards for obtaining the highest grades for this year’s batch of students

    Prof. Maley said having two women awardees may signal the “feminization of diplomacy.”

    Women, indeed, have become one of the leading figures in world diplomacy with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her predecessors Condoleeza Rice and Madeline Albright. In Australia, the head of state and head of government are women, Governor-General Quintin Bryce and Prime Minister Julia Gillard, respectively.

    Over the last two decades, the Philippines had two female heads of state: President Corazon C. Aquino and Gloria M. Arroyo who decided the foreign policy directions of the Philippines. In the area of protection of Filipino overseas workers, it was Aquino who started referring to them as “heroes.” She also started the first Filipino Resource Workers Center in Singapore.

    On the other hand, Arroyo was the first to articulate the third pillar of foreign policy of promoting the protection of OFWs in her State of the Nation Address and in deciding to pull out a small contingent of Filipino troops from Afghanistan to save the life of kidnapped victim Angelo dela Cruz.

    Female diplomats occupy high positions in the Philippine foreign service.   Under the presidency of Benigno Aquino III, the foreign service career corps had a special boost when he named the most number of career foreign service officers to head Philippine Embassies overseas, many of them women.

    In the 2009 Foreign Service Officers’ (FSO) examination, 7 women out of 20 passed the four-part exams, which includes a pre-qualifying test, a preliminary interview, a 3-day written examination, and a 3-day oral examination. The FSO exams are considered the most difficult qualifying exams in the Philippines.

    Over the past decade, the number of female FSOs have increased despite diplomacy’s reputation as a “boy’s club”, and even more women hold the ranks of foreign service staff officers and foreign service staff employees in the Department of Foreign Affairs. 

    Currently, 26 out of 64 Philippine Embassies are led by female Ambassadors while 8 out of 21 Consulates-General are headed by women Consul Generals.  Among the embassies headed by women diplomats as Ambassadors or as Charge d’Affaires, ad interim, are those in Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Indonesia, Israel, Laos, Myanmar, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Singapore, Sweden, East Timor, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Vatican, and Venezuela. Meanwhile, Consulates-General headed by women diplomats include Sydney, Chongqing, Osaka, Los Angeles, Frankfurt, and Milan.

    In Australia, women diplomats lead the Philippine Embassy in Canberra and Consulate-General in Sydney, namely by Charge d’Affaires Mary Anne Padua and Consul-General Anne Louis, respectively. Amb. Belen Anota, who served in Israel and Singapore as Ambassador, has been appointed by President Aquino as Ambassador to Australia.

    There are many career Filipina diplomats who have reached the apex of their careers in foreign service, such as Senator Leticia Ramos-Shahani, Secretary Delia Albert, Ambassador Rosario Manalo, Undersecretary Erlinda Basilio, Ambassador Sonia Brady, Ambassador Susan Castrence and Ambassador Delia Rosal.

    Diplomatic training in Australia
    ANU’s Asia Pacific College of Diplomacy (APCD) was established in 2003. The first of its kind in the southern hemisphere, it aims to promote high-level education, research and dialogue with respect to transnational diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific region.

    Since the beginning of its Masters degree program, six Filipinos have graduated from the APCD through the Australia Leadership Awards (ALA) includes Leonardo.

    Juan E. Dayang, Jr. is one of two Filipino diplomats who are doing postgraduate studies at ANU on Australian government scholarship grants. He is doing a 2-year doctorate in Diplomatic Studies at APCD

    ...the coco water

    Coconut water exports jump 315%


    By: Kristine L. Alave
    Philippine Daily Inquirer


    Inquirer file photo


    Philippine coconut water is going places.

    Coconut water exports jumped 315 percent in the first half of the year to 7.5 million liters, after the popularity of the refreshing beverage started to take off overseas, the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) said.

    Last year the country exported only 1.80 million liters in the same period.

    The PCA said the natural product was exported to the United States, Europe, the Middle East and South America, all of whose markets saw a surge in coconut water consumption.

    Americans were the biggest consumers, downing 6.19 million liters this year for a 387-percent increase over last year’s 1.27-million liters.

    Exports to Europe rose to 213,220 liters from the last year’s 72,280 liters. Asia and the Pacific bought 360,412 liters this year over last year’s 145,778 liters, while Latin and Central America imported 483,338 liters from 190,990 liters the previous year, the PCA said.

    PCA Administrator Euclides Forbes said coconut water had become a popular energy drink abroad because of its natural qualities and lack of chemical preservatives.

    Coconut water is rich in potassium and magnesium, and contains a considerable amount of vitamin B which aids in strengthening the muscles, delaying fatigue and maintaining normal heart function.

    It is also regarded as a good source of electrolytes and glucose and has been found suitable for intravenous rehydration. It is also a healthy and effective treatment for urinary stones.

    Philippine coconut water was in the news recently after President Aquino returned from a visit to the United States where he met with American businessmen who had put up a coconut water processing firm in Camarines Sur.

    To meet future demand, Forbes magazine revealed that the Department of Agriculture and the PCA will implement a massive replanting of coconut trees under the Participatory Coconut Planting Project.

    The Philippines is the world’s top exporter of coconut products, particularly copra. In the first seven months of 2011, coconut exports totaled $1.22 billion, a 34.74 percent jump over the $908.72 million in the same period last year, the PCA said.

    Sunday, October 16, 2011

    ...the Apl advocacy

    Apl.de.ap to kids: We can be anything

    By: Penelope P. Endozo
    Philippine Daily Inquirer
     
    Apl.de.Ap, the Filipino-American member of the American hip-hop group Black Eyed Peas, poses during a press conference on the launching of an education advocacy campaign which he leads Saturday, Oct. 15, 2011 in suburban Pasay City, south of Manila, Philippines. The "We can be anything!" education advocacy campaign seeks to build more classrooms to fill the 66,800 backlog. AP


    MANILA, Philippines – “Get an education, change your situation. Get your graduation, earn your occupation.”

    The lines come from apl.de.ap of the well-known American band Black Eyed Peas in a new song titled “We Can Be Anything,”complete with a music video, that kicks off a campaign to build 10,000 new classrooms in the next two years.

    Apl.de.ap, or Allan Pineda Lindo Jr. launched his new advocacy for education on Saturday, urging Filipinos, including Filipino-Americans like him and others from all over the world, to help Filipino schoolchildren “to go to school and stay in school.”

    “I am proud to be Pinoy and I never forget where I came from…. It’s important to me to give back for the improvement of my country,” said the rock star, who grew up in a poor neighborhood in Sapang Bato, Pampanga, then was adopted at age 14 by an American family.

    Rafael  Lopa, president and executive director of the Ninoy and Cory Aquino Foundation (NCAF), in a joint press conference with the 57-75 Movement, the Department of Education and the Apl Foundation  announced the pre-launch of the campaign at Sofitel with Apl.

    Apl.d.ap and NCAF plan to build 10,000 classrooms in two years or less through the advocacy. Corporate sponsors are encouraged to pledge for classrooms while citizens, too, can donate P10 per day for 10 months to build the classrooms.

    Lopa said that one classroom costs P600,000 to P650,000, as estimated by the Department of Education. He said NCAF was lucky to have reached out to apl who had “a soft spot for education” in order to build a classroom one day at a time.

    Apl.de.ap expressed his intent to focus his efforts on closing the huge gap in public school classrooms because “he knows what education can do to someone’s dreams.”

    Apl, with his signature shades and mohawk hair, shared that his grades were “pretty good” when he was a student despite his eye condition which meant he had to sit in the front row of the class in order to read what was on the blackboard.

    “I would get 85 or higher. When I have difficulty, I get 80, but I had my share of 75, too,” he said. “I had a scholarship so I had to submit my grades and my father was actually impressed.”

    Apl said that when looked back at his difficult childhood, he saw no room for pity, adding he would rather focus on “doing what you can.”

    When asked what his favorite subject was, apl said it had to be “English” because he knew he was getting ready for adoption in the United States.

    “I remember I told my mom that I was scared. I asked her, how will I talk to everyone in English? And my mom gave me a dictionary, where I learned one day at a time,” he said.

    His colleagues in BEP – will.i.am, Fergie and Taboo  — fully support the “You Can Be Anything” campaign and even set the campaign grand launch at the Black Eyed Peas concert on October 25 at the SM Mall of Asia concert grounds.

    “They have been very supportive of my requests. They got my back,” said apl.

    From his own experience, apl.de.ap said he knows how important it is to get a good education. On Nov. 18, 2008, he launched the Apl Foundation to help various communities and children in the Philippines and throughout Asia.

    “Perhaps, it is providential that his birthday falls on November 28, a day after that of Ninoy Aquino,” Lopa said. “This tells me that he is destined to help us take the Filipino brand of heroism to the next level.”

    Apl said that the first step to help is in one’s intent. Everything else one needs to know to support the campaign is at http://www.wecanbeanything.com/.


    ...the Sikat

    Solar-powered PHL car racing against world's best



    A Philippine-made car is competing in one of the most revolutionary racing events in the world... and also among the quietest. The Sikat II solar car developed by De La Salle University engineering students and faculty will be racing in the 3,000-kilometer 11th World Solar Challenge (WSC) in Australia starting Sunday.


    The biannual race draws innovators from all over the globe to show what long-distance transport can be in an oil-depleted future. It also promises to be an adventure for the racing teams, with camping in the desert and the occasional kangaroo darting onto the race route, which stretches from Darwin in Australia's northern tip to Adelaide on the country's southern coast.

    Unlike the roar of conventional internal combustion engines that run on fossil fuels, electric cars powered by solar energy like the Sikat II simply hum even at its top speed of 110 kilometers per hour.

    The Sikat II is also a statement of solar energy's state of the art in the Philippines, where university researchers are harnessing the cutting-edge advantages of solar cells made locally. The country is a growing exporter of solar panels and other technologies.

    The Philippines’ solar car and the team running it, Team Solar Philippines, are competing against vehicles backed by some of the world’s leading universities.

    Tokai University, Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Michigan, Cambridge University, University of Toronto are among the top-notch institutions registered in the race.

    When the country joined the race for the first time in 2007, it placed 12th in a field of 40. Tokai University's "Tokai Challenger" won the race in 2009.

    DLSU professor and Sikat II team leader Jose Antonio “Jack" Catalan told GMA News Online via phone interview that their solar car passed the pre-race “dynamic tests" to determine vehicle stability and road-worthiness.

    Those tests covered steering, braking and performance. A “hot lap" on the track of the Hidden Valley Motorsport Complex near Darwin in northern Australia followed the dynamic scrutiny to determine the starting position on Sunday.

    Catalan said the team will strive to achieve optimum energy efficiency so that Sikat II's solar cells will have enough power to last until the end of the race.

    Energy challenge

    The race has another wrinkle. The solar cars are only allowed five kilowatt-hours maximum of stored energy in their batteries.

    “Having demanded the world’s most efficient electric vehicles to travel the route we make things more difficult by adding the concept of ‘man vs. the elements’ by regulating the stored energy component to a nominal 10% of that required to complete the journey," WSC event director Chris Selwood said.

    "Each team will travel as far as it can each day and camp in the desert each night. The exact progress is of course subject to the intensity of the sun, the condition of the road and whether there is any prospect of cloud," Selwood added.

    Race timetable

    Sikat II will be the 32nd solar car to leave the Darwin state square, where the competing vehicles will be flagged off at 8:30 a.m. local time (10 a.m. Manila time).

    From Darwin in the north, the solar cars will travel south and are expected to reach the finish line in Adelaide by late Wednesday afternoon.
    Organizers said the competing teams must observe local traffic rules, including the speed limits, and non-Australians must have their international drivers' licenses with them.

    “Finish of Timing is a point established outside of the Adelaide urban area. Effectively this will determine the winner, however the solar car must still proceed under its own power to the ceremonial finish line in Victoria Square, the centre of Adelaide," organizers of the World Solar Challenge also said.
    Solar power plus Lasallian spirit
    Team Solar Philippines is made up of about a dozen faculty and students of DLSU. They operate Sikat II, the third generation of Philippine solar cars to compete in the WSC.

    The team and their colleagues in the DLSU College of Engineering, with the support of collaborators in the Philippine Solar Car Challenge Society (PSCCS), spent at least seven months to prepare for the race from Darwin to Adelaide through the Australian Outback.

    Sikat II, which cost about P6 million to build, sports a more aerodynamic design, weighs 180 kilograms, and has more efficient solar power mechanisms, according to the DLSU team.

    Sikat II runs on a 1.8-kilowatt motor and has top speed of 110 kilometers per hour (kph). The maximum speed limit at some sections of the Stuart highway, through which the race will run, is 130 kph.

    Sinag, the vehicle that ran the race in 2007, was heavier at 290 kilograms and had a solar array that was two percentage points less efficient than Sikat II's.

    The president and CEO of De La Salle Philippines, Bro. Ricardo Laguda, FSC is in Australia to support the team on behalf of the Filipino Lasallian community.

    Also in Australia to support the team is PSCCS president Ramon Agustines, team manager of the Philippine contingent, and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) – Philippines, which sent Nini Conwi, the winner of an essay writing contest about Sikat II, to write about the team’s experience in the 11th WSC.

    Weather in the Land Down Under
    Strong thunderstorms and mostly cloudy skies are forecast over Darwin on Sunday. More clouds are also expected over Katherine, the first checkpoint along the race course.

    However, sunny skies are expected up ahead over Tennant Creek and Alice Springs as the course goes through the desert sections of the Australian Outback.


    View The Journey of Sikat II in the World Solar Challenge 2011 in a larger map

    Safety always

    Organizers advised the registered teams and media covering the WSC to practice road safety while on the course.

    "In stage one of the race, the road from Darwin to Katherine is windy and undulating for the first 200 kms with minimal overtaking lanes," event director Chris Selwood said.

    "The drive is long and monotonous. Speed, fatigue and wildlife on the roads are factors that can lead to dangerous situations," Selwood cautioned. "Do not underestimate the danger of driving during hours of darkness as cattle and kangaroos are just two of the obstacles that you may experience sharing the road with you."

    He further warned that "(w)hen a road train hits a kangaroo it makes a mess. When your car hits a kangaroo you could be dead too!" — ELR/HS, GMA News