My gift strategy is to look for gifts starting a few months before the holiday. If I find something that will make a great present, I stash it in a box in my closet until November, when I make a formal list of everyone I want to give gifts to. This takes some pressure off of buying gifts (because I’ve already bought many of them) and it allows me to take advantage of sales.
My digital buddy Jennifer Melnick Carota, aka The Gift Therapist, has a similar strategy. She keeps a special “gift wallet” in her purse where she keeps $20 in cash.
“This allows me to challenge myself to find the best gifts at the best prices…without the guilt of cutting into my household budget,” she told me. “In addition to gift items, I also load up on off-season gift wrap, baskets, and ribbon all year long. Look for major steals at up to 90 percent off following any given holiday!”
Buying early is one strategy for keeping within your budget. If it doesn’t appeal to you, no worries. I will suggest a few other approaches in the coming weeks and months. But if any of these gift ideas appeal to you, start watching for them to go on sale!
For anyone who cooks – America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook . This is hands down my favorite cookbook (sorry, Barefoot Contessa!). Every recipe is party proof, so no worries about testing out recipes ahead of them. They are ALL amazing.$23.07 at Amazon.
For the techie – a clearance gadget from ThinkGeek.com. A friend says the titanium chopsticks are the bomb, but I like the Dado Stacking Cubes for $15 (orig. $27).
For a good friend – cute note cards. Know someone who loves to send thank yous in the mail? For an extra touch, pair the gift with a special roll of stamps. This blue and brown set of cards with a tapestry design comes with 14 cards and 15 envelopes for $9. Keep an eye on sales at stationary stores for a low-priced set.
For a host or hostess – look for serving pieces in the clearance section of your favorite discount department stores, recommends the Gift Therapist. “The plates, platters, and/or utensil sets make a fabulous addition to the gift of food,” she said. “And be sure to tell the giftee to keep the dish!”
SOURCE: http://www.vtunnel.com/index.php/1010110A/9440d9d8a9fe29f38f66938275cb00153fc6eaca2e45903e485e53631e224afd9c861e2fc61b058be1fc737c8e439b400c956c689215fe316f469376bbb9c1584266a93a30e6b7494e00a88d674df826cf35ac8b671c456e973bbebc5cd921578

"toot! toot! tootoooot!"
"toot! toot! TOOTOOOOT!"
"TOOT! TOOT! TOOTOOOOT!!!"
“6:00 EY.EM. NA!!!” sabi ng cellphone ko. "Bangon na..." sabi naman ng nag-iinat ko pang misis. (May balak pa atang magpatangkad). Kape, mayo-bun plus noodles ang almusal…ngasab…ngasab…ngasab…After last bite, ubos ng noodles, then sip pa uli ng kape…SOLVE! BRAVO!
Namumungas pa din, kakaantok, sarap matulog. Bagsak-matang nilusob ang banyo….WALANG KIKILOS NG MASAMA! IYAY! Ang sama ng amoy ng banyo. Si muning-garzi nag-drop na naman ng “e-box” kaya sabog ang baho sa banyo. Walang ibang bomb squad member kundi ako. Mabilis na kumuha ng armas sa paghabol na baka madamay ang iba (PAPEL – pangdakma sa ebox, PLASTIC – pambalot ng ebox na dinakma sa papel, iwas paglaganap ng pagsabog, TABO - pangbuhos ng tubig sa naiwang bakas ng pulbura ng ebox). “5….4….3….2…!” (WHOOOSSSSSHHHH!) YEEEBBAAAHHH!!!
“Ano ginagawa mo?” Misis ko uli. Tumingin lang ako…”All clear ma’am! Bomb’s been defused! Hehe! Ligo na ’ko.”
“…mmm…mmmmm in the rain…. just singin in the rain…..” Ligo, bihis, ayos gamit, etc, etc! Psst! Psssst! Pssssssst! Konting pabango…..Wow! bango ko na! “Ok, ka na mahal? Let’s go!” .
“Mang, Pang, pasok na po kami!” paalam ko. Tulog pa pala papang ko, kapatid tsaka pamangkin ko. Tumango mamang ko. “Sige ingat, nagdala kayo ng payong?” Tumango din ako nagkumpirmang nagdala nga kami.
Sa labas ng bahay. “Barya? Tanong ni misis. “Meron na, ako na magbabayad.” Lakad….lakad….Tawid papunta sa maliit na park na may mga service vehicles byaheng Makati. “Dalawa po manong.” P100.00 inabot ko bago kami sumakay ng van. “Sukli po” sabi ni manong – P70.00. “Ha?” tumingin ako kay misis. “P15.00 isa? Hindi ba P35.00 bayad bawat isa?” Tumango na lang misis ko… “baka bumaba pamasahe, mahal!” sabi nya. “Ok pala!” sabi ko.
Tahimik, mga kasabay namin tulog. Ang bilis ng byahe, maluwag ang kalsada. Ilang minuto lang, mga 15 minutes nasa Makati na kami agad. “Hay! Sarap magwork pag ganito lagi ang umaga…“ usal ko sa isip pagtapos magdasal para sa maghapong kaligtasan sa labas ng bahay. Bumaba na ako para sumakay ng jeep papuntang Mantrade para sumakay uli ng isa pang jeep papuntang Paranaque…iwas biyahe ako mula Pasay-Rotonda, matrapik kasi mula ‘ron. Si misis naman tuloy sa Ayala ang baba mula sa service vehicle…. lakad uli diretso trabaho.
Nagtext si misis “Ofc nko mahal.” (7:45 EY. EM) Ngiti sa mga labi ang reply ko.
“Tak!” (7:55 EY. EM.) Hay! Salamat po at hindi ako late………
Zzzzzzzzzzzzooooooooooommmmmmmmmmmm………………. nagising ako.......
panaginip lang pala.......

Kung ikaw ay isang ice cream, ano ka? Yum yum…..
May iba't ibang klase ang ice cream – sa flavor, kulay, label o
brand, presyo, lalagyan o kung pano at gano katagal pa ito inayos
bago mo makain.
Nasa panlasa ba o nasa paningin ang pagkakaiba? Pwede rin sigurong
nasa pananaw o karanasan.
Halimbawa:
1. "Yun po gusto ko kulay pink!" (di na inalam kung anong
flavor, brand, lalagyan, itsura o presyo)
2. "Yun po gusto ko Magnecta!" (di na inalam kung anong flavor,
kulay , lalagyan, itsura o presyo)
3. "Yun po ang sa akin, keso (di na inalam kung anong brand,
kulay , lalagyan, itsura o presyo)
4. "Yun po ang sa akin, naka-cone (di na inalam kung anong
brand, kulay o presyo)
Hindi ba pinaikot lang tyo ng apat na magagaling. Bakit hindi na
lang isa? Ah oo nga pala, may halu-halo flavor na, pero ang tao
hahanap padin ng wala dyan o ng pwedeng ikasira ng ulo nila -
lalagyan, presyo o brand… walang kuntento, walang katahimikan. Tsk!
Tsk! Tsk! sabi ng bayaw ko sa text (deaf sya pero na-eexpress nya
panghihinayang o inis sa isang bagay) ikaw man kita ko ngayon
napapailing dahil totoo to.
Sana mapuno ng free, peace flavor, rainbow bright colors o generic
pero may quality ang paraan ng pagtaguyod ng buhay ang isang tao.
"Mas simple, mas masaya!"
Ikaw? Kelan mo titikman o babalikang muli ang simpleng ice cream?

"Ikaw nga wala nang iba ang tinutukoy kong isa sa mga nagbasa ng
titulo ng kalokohan kong ito." Siguradong taas-kilay o duda ka't
tinanong pa kunsensya mo kung BABASAHIN MO PA BA TO o ibabasura na
dahil mali ang spelling ng Otobiography. ... Pinoy ka nga.
Alam mo bang 98% (2% mongoloid) sa mga pinoy ay inaalihan ng espiritu
ni Critisismo? Hindi yan kapatid ni Crisostomo, Basilio o Crispin na
inaakala mo. Isa yan sa katangian ng pinoy sa ngayon na parang kulay
abong matsing na natuto lang bumaba sa puno ng saging, makapagsulat,
makabasa, makakain ng hindi lang saging, mabihisan ng magagandang
damit, makausap ng mga malalaking puting matsing at tumira sa
malalaking gusali e hindi na magkandaumayaw sa pagmamarunong at
pagpuna sa mali ng iba.... HINDI KA MATSING alam ko! pero yan ang
katulad ng mga may anyong tao pero maliit-makitid ang pagiisip
pagdating sa pakikitungo at hindi yung
pagmamalinis lang ng sarili.
Anu-ano ba ang mga senyales kung patungo ka na nga sa pagiging
MATSING?.... ....itutuloy
Senyales kung patungo ka na nga sa pagiging
MATSING..... ...ipinagpatuloy :
1. nakaupo ka sa work area mo, may dumaan sabi syo "ano yan?"
(tumutukoy sa monitor mo na may active yahoo messenger o facebook). sagot mo
lang - MALAKING NGITI SA MGA LABI =)
(explanation: matsing kasi nanlalamang sa kapwa instead of working
sa WORK area. inserted expalanation ---- MASAYA NAMAN dapat ituloy
lang kasi natatapos ko work ko, YUN NAMAN PALA) relaxed din kahit
pano. GRRRRRR! AKO TINUTUKOY DITO SA NUMBER ONE!
2. naglalakad ka na may MALAWAK na kalsada sa utak mo hanggang
napatigil ka dahil may lata sa ESKENITAng dinadaanan mo - kay
manong pala nanlilimos.
(explanation: malalim ka magisip, malawak at matayog ni hindi mo na
napapansin na may mas hikahos pa sayo na dapat ka ring tumulong para
ikaw naman ang tulungan ng mga mas mataas syo)
3. nasa bahay ka, almusal na rock-style ang ambiance mo. nagpunta sa
kusina para buksan ang mataas na cupboard ng mga delata (pwedeng
plastic ng SM na nakasabit sa tabi ni fulgoso para di makuha ng
magnanakaw), pagyuko mo may tuyo. Dahil yumuko ka nahulog si delata
at parang malaking helicopter ng corned beef ang dadagan syo sa
akting mo na pang-hollywood para lang maiwasan ang CDO na ga-2-inch
lang kung tutuusin.
(explanation: matutong mamaluktot habang maigsi ang kumot)
COMMERCIAL 073107
Ang misis ko may meeting ngayon. Kahapon din meeting. Hindi na
natapos. Tiyak yun kung online man sya isa lang nakadugtong sa YM
nya - OUT FROM KEYBOARD. Busy kasi parang tyo - ON KEYBOARD. Dapat
ako naman ka-meeting nya sa Fri, Sat & Sun, kaya lang ako naman habol
sa pgtapos ng AT, BL tsaka T.
Kanina habang ngpi-print-range ako bumabagsak na mata
ko........pinulot ko na.....kakaantok.

The issue about global warming, violence, drought, pestilence, wars and other unexplainable events contribute to the saying that:
"THE END OF THE WORLD IS NEAR..."
please visit this site and comment:
http://gospelian-philippines.blogspot.com
Guys, check this out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQcVllWpwGs
Just sharing with you fun with toddlers.... haha!

Influenza A(H1N1)v infection - Update 10 July 2009, 17:00 hours CEST
[Original Full Document: LINK. EDITED.]
Main developments in past 24 hours
2647 new confirmed cases reported from the EU and EFTA countries, including 2271 cases from the UK;
The latest analysis of individual case reports in the EU/EEA countries is now available;
2199 new cases reported from non-EU and EFTA countries, reaching a total of 95,811;
Two new non-EU/EFTA countries report their first cases: Tanzania and St Vincent;
New Zealand reports on high influenza activity.
This report is based on official information provided by the national public health websites, or through other official communication channels. An update on the number of confirmed cases as of 10 July 2009, 17:00 hours CEST, is presented in Table 1 and Table 2.
Disclaimer:
the number of confirmed cases reported is based on laboratory test results, except for the US. Depending on the national laboratory testing policies, the actual number of cases by country may therefore be higher.
Epidemiological update
Out of the 31 EU and EFTA countries, 30 countries are reporting a total of 13,667 confirmed cases, including 16 deaths.
In the past 24 hours, 2647 new cases were confirmed from the EU and EFTA countries, the majority of which come from the UK (Table1).
The analysis of influenza A(H1N1)v individual case reports in the EU and EEA countries has been updated as of 9 July. The results can be found at the end of this report, as well as on ECDC’s website: http://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/files/pdf/Health_topics/090709_Influenza_A(H1N1)_Analysis_of_individual_data_EU_EEA-EFTA.pdf.
The UK, now reporting on a weekly basis, confirmed a total of 9718 cases, including 14 deaths. The apparent large increase in the deaths reported is partly due to this weekly “batch reporting”. The Health Protection Agency states that the majority of the pandemic influenza cases remain mild. The fatal cases all had underlying risk factors. The full update is available from: http://www.hpa.org.uk/web/HPAwebFile/HPAweb_C/1247125493338.
Spain reported a second fatal case, in a 41-year old man with underlying chronic illness: http://www.msc.es/gabinetePrensa/notaPrensa/desarrolloNotaPrensa.jsp?id=1575.
Outside of the EU and EFTA countries, a total of 2199 new cases have been reported within the last 24 hours, including 37 new fatal cases: Argentina (22), UK (11), Mexico (2), Spain (1) and Peru (1). The first cases of influenza A(H1N1)v were confirmed from Tanzania and St Vincent. A total of 95,811 cases are reported outside of the EU and EFTA countries, including 491 deaths (Table 2). The global number of confirmed cases is 109,478 and 507 deaths.
Several media reports discussed the latest surveillance report from the Institute of Environmental Science and Research of New Zealand highlighting the high consultation rates for influenza-like illness (ILI) from the national sentinel surveillance system. These continue to be much higher (184/100 000 population) than the previous two years and are still increasing. The predominant strain identified in samples from the sentinel population and from the laboratory surveillance is now influenza A(H1N1)v, despite the ongoing seasonal flu transmission.
SOURCE: http://www.widgetbox.com/network/health/post/influenza-ah1n1v-infection-update-10/1378869

MANILA, Philippines – Maging ang Asia’s Song Bird na si Regine Velasquez ay hindi pala nakaligtas sa Influenza A(H1N1). Bagaman magaling na at ready na muling magtrabaho, hindi pa rin maisip ng singer-actress kung saan niya nakuha ang virus.
Ilang linggo ring nagpahinga at nag self-quarantine si Regine dahil sa A(H1N1). Katunayan, sa nakaraang episode ng Are You The Next Big Star?, pansamantalang humalili kay Regine bilang host si Richard Gomez.
"Masakit yung mga ganito-ganito," kuwento ni Regine habang itinuturo ang bahagi ng katawan.
"Kahit magpamasahe ka ‘di ba parang wala namang nagaganap, ganun, tapos ubo-ubo, nilagnat na, ganun," pahayag pa niya kay entertainment reporter Lhar Santiago sa 24 Oras ng GMA News nitong Huwebes.
Ayon pa sa singer-actress, nagpunta siya sa ospital para ipatingin ang sakit pero hindi na siya pina-confine ng kanyang duktor.
“Kasi sabi ng duktor no need [for confinement], just for me to rest in the house tapos self- quarantine na lang just in case H1N1. Sure enough it was. Yun inalagaan ko na lang ang sarili ko, inalagaan ako ni Ogie [Alcasid]," idinagdag ni Regine.
Dahil marami siyang bansa na pinuntahan para mag-show, hindi na raw malaman ni Regine kung saan niya nakuha ang virus na mabilis na kamakalat ngayon sa Pilipinas.
“I think what happen to me sumobrang baba immune system ko kasi sa kapupuytat, naging anemic pa ko kakatrabaho, kasi yung traveling ko noon tapos diretso taping tinamaan ako," paglalahad pa niya.
Ngayon, magaling na magaling na rin ang singer-actress at handa na muling sumabak sa mga trabaho. Kabilang sa kanyang pinaghahandaan ang nakatakdang concert niya sa Agosto na pinamagatang, Regine: Most Requested. - Fidel Jimenez, GMANews.TV
SOURCE: http://www.gmanews.tv/story/167046/Regine-Velasquez-recovers-from-A(H1N1)-flu

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Michael Jackson's father said on Friday he suspected "foul play" in the death of his pop star son, as lawyers disclosed talks aimed at settling guardianship of the singer's two children with his ex-wife.
The previously unknown talks caused a Los Angeles court to delay by one week a key hearing over custody of the kids, who are now being cared for by Jackson's 79-year-old mother.
Jackson's father, Joe Jackson, told ABC News in a TV interview Friday that he was dumbfounded when he learned his son collapsed at home and was being rushed to the hospital.
"I just couldn't believe what was happening to Michael. I do believe it was foul play. I do believe that," he said, without elaborating.
The "Thriller" singer died suddenly over two weeks ago after suffering cardiac arrest at his rented Los Angeles mansion. He was 50. Since then, numerous media reports have surfaced about powerful prescription drugs found by police at Jackson's home after his June 25 death.
"I didn't know anything about the drugs," Joe Jackson said. "I didn't even know the name of them. But I do know that whatever he'd taken was to try to make him rest because he had been working so hard, and that drug was supposed to try and make him relax.
"But anyway he didn't wake up. He never woke up. Michael died in his sleep."
Toxicology reports are pending on the official cause of Jackson's death, but numerous media reports have said that the dangerous sedative Diprivan -- normally used in hospitals by anesthesiologists -- was found at the singer's home.
A ROW WITH ROWE?
Jackson family attorney and spokesman L. Londell McMillan, said his legal team is now in talks with attorneys for Jackson's ex-wife, Debbie Rowe, about the key question of who will care for his children.
A judge gave Jackson's mother, Katherine Jackson, temporary guardianship days after the singer's death, and a hearing to continue her role had been set for July 13.
"We are pleased that the child custody hearing has been continued over until July 20 to allow us to continue to make progress in our dignified and amicable discussions for the best interest of the children," McMillan told Reuters.
He declined to detail the discussions or say if Rowe, was seeking custody of the two children she bore Jackson while they were married in the late 1990s: Prince Michael Jr, 12, and Paris, 11. Jackson had a third child, Prince Michael II, 7, using a surrogate mother whose name has never been disclosed.
Last week, Rowe told a Los Angeles television station, "I want my children," but later that same day her attorney told reporters in a telephone conference call that although the quote was correct, its intention was distorted.
At the time, attorney Eric George said Rowe had not made a decision about whether she would seek custody of the two kids, and since then Rowe has not addressed the matter in public.
In a 2002 will, Jackson nominated his mother to be the guardian, but legal experts say Rowe can challenge the guardianship and possibly win custody of her two children.
"California law, like many states' laws, strongly favors children remaining in a family that was intact when they were born, even if it no longer is at this point," said Scott Altman, an expert in family law who teaches at the University of Southern California.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Paul Simao)
SOURCE: http://omg.yahoo.com/news/jacksons-dad-suspects-foul-play-in-death/25067

05/24/2009 | 11:46 AM
MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines on Sunday reported its second confirmed case of Influenza A(H1N1) virus infection.
The Department of Health (DOH) announced this a day after a 30-year-old Taiwanese woman and her five-year-old daughter who traveled in the Philippines for five days have tested positive for H1N1 virus in Taiwan.
Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said the second A(H1N1) patient was a 50-year-old woman who arrived in the country from Chicago in the United States last May 20.
“We are stepping up our preparedness and response plan more intensely. We have been working round the clock especially now that we are officially announcing the second confirmed case of H1N1 in the country," Duque said in a press briefing at the Lung Center of the Philippines in Quezon City.
He assured the public that the government remains on top of the situation.
He said the patient, whose identity was withheld, sought a doctor after noticing mild symptoms of the dreaded flu, including coughs and fever, the day after her arrival.
Duque said the patient is currently under observation at the Research Institute of Tropical Medicine (RITM) in Manila. The government is now tracing those who made contacts with her.
“She only has mild symptoms which include fever and cough. At present, she does not have symptoms. She was immediately started on medications and is currently being monitored," he said.
Last Thursday, the DOH reported that a 10-year-old girl who also came from US was the country's first case of the dreaded flu virus, which has caused more than 80 deaths worldwide, most of them in Mexico.
Duque said the child “is now almost fully recovered with only mild sore throat."
“She is completing her antiviral medications and will be discharged as soon as repeat PCR for Influenza A (H1N1) is negative. Contact tracing has also been done and all household contacts were given antiviral prophylaxis," he said.
Hygiene
In MalacaƱang, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is set to spearhead a campaign for hygiene and sanitation in schools, in time for the opening of classes on June 1, in the wake of the A(H1N1) threat.
Press Secretary Cerge Remonde said Mrs. Arroyo would meet with parents and teachers on Monday to dialogue on the issue and discuss it inTuesday’s Cabinet meeting.
“Ngayong Monday mangunguna si Pangulong Gloria Macapagal Arroyo together with Secretary Duque sa isang paaralan sa San Miguel sa Manila kung saan ang Pangulo makikipag-dayalogo sa parents at teachers sa isang elementary school," Remonde said on government-run dzRB radio.
[On Monday, Mrs. Arroyo and Secretary Duque III will hold a dialogue with parents and teachers at a school in San Miguel in Manila.]
He said the dialogue is part of “promoting awareness" especially on hygiene and sanitation, to prevent the spread of the A(H1N1) virus.
Meanwhile, the A(H1N1) problem has prompted several Catholic churches in the country to distribute communion by hand during Sunday mass.
In several churches in Metro Manila, an announcement was made before the Holy Communion that the hosts were to be distributed only by hand. The Church however did not advise families against holding hands during the "Ama Namin (Our Father)."
The policy was reminiscent of the policy adopted by the Church to distribute hosts by hand in 2003, as a precaution against Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).
On Saturday, the CBCP threw its full support behind the DOH in preventing the spread of A(H1N1).
CBCP President Angel Lagdameo exhorted the faithful to follow the advisories of the DOH in preventing the spread of A(H1N1).
“Komo hindi tayo duktor o nurse kinakailangan tayo maging observant at susundin ang payo ng duktor sa ating maysakit [We are not doctors or nurses. We need to be observant and follow the advice of doctors]," Lagdameo said in an interview on dzXL radio.
He also pointed out the CBCP already issued a pastoral exhortation as early as May 2, urging people to heed advisories from the DOH. - GMANews.TV
SOURCE: http://www.gmanews.tv/story/162657/RP-confirms-second-case-of-A(H1N1)-infection

May 21, 2009
The Department of Health is officially announcing this evening the first confirmed case of Influenza A (H1N1) in the Philippines.
A female traveler arrived in the Philippines on May 18, Monday, from the United States and Canada. A throat specimen was collected, and was tested at the Research Institute of Tropical Medicine (RITM) on May 20, Wednesday, after she developed fever, sore throat and cough.
Today, RITM confirmed that the specimen tested positive for the novel Influenza A (H1N1) on PCR using the primers sent by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
She was immediately started on an antiviral, Oseltamivir, and given supportive care. At this time, the patient is continuously being monitored. She no longer has fever or cough, but still has sore throat.
The DOH would like to emphasize that there is no community level outbreak in the country and measures are being done by the government to prevent transmission, starting with the quarantine of household close contacts.
The family of the patient has been informed and advised about the situation. We would like to thank them for their cooperation and willingness to comply with the recommendations of the DOH. They were advised to observe self-monitoring, home quarantine, social distancing, proper hygiene and respiratory etiquette procedures.
We appeal to our media partners and the rest of the nation to respect the privacy and anonymity of the patient and her family. Rest assured that any information vital to protect public health and safety will be appropriately shared to those concerned.
The DOH also stresses that the discovery of this first case of Influenza A(H1N1) in the Philippines is something we have been preparing for and is a result of the collective efforts of both public and private sectors as well as the effective surveillance system which we have put in place.
Read more at this site--
SOURCE:
http://www.doh.gov.ph/h1n1/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=84:update-no-18-rps-1st-h1n1-case&catid=35:daily-influenza-a-h1n1-updates&Itemid=61

UNDP blames falling enrolment shortages...
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Philippines may face an “education crisis” because of falling enrolment as well as shortages in classrooms, books and teachers amid the government’s tight fiscal situation, experts warned Wednesday during the launching of a UN report.
To make matters worse, the UN report also said the Philippines was wasting millions of pesos on salaries for “excess” government.
In a forum on Wednesday, Solita Monsod, founding president of Human Development Network and economics professor at the University of the Philippines, said the weak basic education enrolment was an indication of an “education crisis.” The network wrote the report that was commissioned by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).
Based on the Philippine Human Development Report 2008/2009, public elementary students enrolment dropped to 12.03 million between 2007 and 2008, from 12.08 million between 2006 and 2007.
For private elementary schools, enrolment stood at 1.09 million between 2007 and 2008, slightly higher from 1.03 million between 2006 and 2007.
For high school students, enrolment moved up slightly to 5.12 million in public schools and 1.33 million in private institutions.
Winfred Villamil, president of Economists Society of the Philippines, said the basic education enrolment hardly improved, staying steady at 91 percent between 2002 and 2004.
He added that the worrisome declines were observed in North Cotobato, Kalinga, Zamboanga del Norte, Tawi-Tawi and Davao Oriental—where enrolment dropped 10 percentage points or more.
more at this site ---->>> SOURCE: http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2009/may/21/yehey/top_stories/20090521top1.html

KRIS ALLEN Winner of American Idol 2009 | Kris Allen Wins American Idol Season 8,
came as a big, big surprise for me since Adam Lambert had been seemingly the favorite of the judges particularly during last night’s 2009 American Idol Season 8 Pre-Finals Night where they had a sing-off.
SOURCE: http://www.chartherct.com/2009/05/21/kris-allen-winner-of-american-idol-2009-kris-allen-wins-american-idol-season-8/

Mar 17, 2009 18:47
Filipinos are gearing up for the Philippine presidential elections in May 2010, and the Commission on Elections here is looking at poll automation to discourage, if not totally eliminate, electoral fraud.
Known in local parlance as dagdag-bawas, vote padding and shaving are unfortunately fixtures in Philippine elections, with rival parties routinely accusing each other of cheating. As the joke goes, nobody loses in Philippine elections because everyone claims to have been cheated.
While this election official probably wasn't joking, I found it amusing to read in this INQUIRER.net breaking news article that he's daring hackers to crack the poll automation software that Comelec will be deploying. Somebody should tell the good Comelec official that based on experience the world over, it's usually not a good idea to dare hackers or to claim your system is hack-proof.
Here's an excerpt:
The Commission on Elections (Comelec) is challenging computer
hackers to take a crack at the software that will be used in the 2010
elections to prove that the system is secure from fraud and tampering.
"By the time a hacker gets into our system, the election is over,"
Comelec executive director Jose Tolentino boldly declared Monday in a
press briefing.
Tolentino said the Comelec would welcome cyber-security experts who wish to check the system for weaknesses.
Programmers and the general public can also scrutinize the source
code of the company that will bag the 11.3 billion-peso automation contract
for the 2010 national elections.
Well, guess it's good to know that, rightly or wrongly, the Comelec feels very confident about poll automation.
Now, if only we Filipinos can be confident there won't be cheating at the polls...
SOURCE: http://asia.cnet.com/blogs/babelmachine/post.htm?id=63009597

Tuesday, 19 May 2009, 1:31 pm
Press Release: Ministry of Health
Media Release
12:30pm, Tuesday 19 May 2009
Update 43 - Influenza A (H1N1) Swine Flu
While the case numbers in New Zealand remain stable, the National Health Coordination Centre (NHCC) is taking the opportunity to support the health sector and wider government agencies to prepare well in case the situation worsens.
The Ministry of Health has written to all District Health Board Chief Executives and heads of government agencies, telling them why we need to remain vigilant and advising them to be well-prepared.
What happens here – and our level of response – is assessed regularly taking into account cases in other countries, the picture in New Zealand and changes to the virus. We are keeping a close eye on the situation overseas, where the number of cases being notified continues to increase.
New Zealand situation
There are no new cases of Influenza A (H1N1) infections in New Zealand. The cumulative total of known past infections remains at nine, with all cases fully recovered. The cumulative total of
past probable cases remains at 10, with all cases fully recovered.
There are currently 38 suspected cases –(up from 37 yesterday)
The numbers of suspected cases fluctuate as more people with symptoms arriving from affected areas are assessed (treated and isolated), and as laboratory testing rules out some suspected cases.
As of Monday 18 May, the exact number of people in isolation or quarantine and being treated with Tamiflu is six. (As of Friday, 15 May 2009, there were nine.) The numbers of people in isolation vary according to when they complete 72 hours of the five-day course of Tamiflu.
International Update from the World Health Organisation
As of 06:00 GMT, 18 May 2009, 40 countries have officially reported 8829 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection. ]
Mexico has reported 3103 laboratory confirmed human cases of infection, including 68 deaths. The United States has reported 4714 laboratory confirmed human cases, including four deaths. Japan has 125 laboratory confirmed cases, 118 of them confirmed since May 17. The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Argentina (1), Australia (1), Austria (1), Belgium (5), Brazil (8), Canada (496), Chile (1), China (6), Colombia (11), Costa Rica (9 ), Cuba (3), Denmark (1), Ecuador (1), El Salvador (4), Finland (2), France (14), Germany (14), Guatemala (3), India (1), Ireland (1), Israel (7), Italy (9), Japan (125), Malaysia (2), Netherlands (3), New Zealand (9), Norway (2), Panama (54), Peru (1), Poland (1), Portugal (1), Republic of Korea (3), Spain (103), Sweden (3), Switzerland (1), Thailand (2), Turkey (2), and the United Kingdom (101).
The WHO is not recommending travel restrictions related to the outbreak of the influenza A (H1N1) virus.
The WHO recommends that individuals who are ill should delay travel plans and returning travellers who fall ill should seek appropriate medical care. These recommendations are prudent measures which can limit the spread of many communicable diseases, including influenza.
Regular updates on the Influenza A(H1N1) outbreak are available on the WHO website on a regular basis (www.who.int).
This information can be attributed to Dr Fran McGrath, Deputy Director of Public Health.
SOURCE: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/GE0905/S00147.htm

05/14/2009 | 11:31 AM
Email this | Email the Editor | Print | ShareThisLOS ANGELES – Danny Gokey is dancing off "American Idol," leaving showy Adam Lambert and twangy Kris Allen to duke it out in the finale of the popular Fox singing competition next week.
Gokey, the bespectacled 29-year-old church music director and recent widower from Milwaukee, was revealed to have received the fewest viewer votes on Wednesday.
Gokey had continually impressed the judges with his husky voice — but not his hip shaking — throughout the contest. "Idol" judge Simon Cowell called his cover of Joe Cocker's version of "You Are So Beautiful" on Tuesday a "vocal master class" but said his dancing during Terence Trent D'Arby's "Dance Little Sister" was "desperate."
Along with Lambert, Gokey had long been considered to be a front-runner of the eighth season, never appearing as one of the show's bottom vote-getters. "Idol" host Ryan Seacrest said more than 88 million votes were received with 1 million votes separating the top two singers, meaning next week's Lambert-Allen showdown may be closer than anticipated.
"Look, none of us would have predicted this, guys," Cowell at the end of the show.
The episode kicked off with "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" stars Ben Stiller, Hank Azaria, Bill Hader and Jonah Hill starring in a plug masquerading as a skit about the "Idol" judges' desk being inducted into the Smithsonian. It wasn't a joke. The perch will be on display at the Smithsonian Institution Building in the coming weeks.
Before the results viewers saw Alicia Keys urging fans to support her charity, a 15-year-old Rwandan rapper named Noah, sixth-season champ Jordin Sparks, videos of the final three singers' trips to their hometowns and an over-the-top performance by Katy Perry.
Gokey just wanted to cut to the chase.
"I think we've had enough suspense, enough commercials, just enough playing around," he said. "Let's just get to it."
"I want to see Katy Perry!" Lambert exclaimed in response.
The feeling was apparently mutual. Perry made her love for Lambert no secret. The "I Kissed a Girl" singer crooned her latest single, "Waking Up in Vegas," with a troupe of glittery showgirls while wearing a scantily clad Elvis-inspired ensemble that was initially covered in a cape emblazoned with Lambert's name.
Either Lambert, a 27-year-old theater actor from San Diego, or Allen, a 23-year-old college student from Conway, Ark., will be crowned "Idol" next Wednesday. Cowell said Allen's totally stripped-down version of Kanye West's "Heartless" on Tuesday made him a contender for the finale. - AP
SOURCE: http://www.gmanews.tv/story/161213/Final-2-American-Idol-singers-selected

Posted by ed on Apr 2nd, 2009
It was late part of 2008 when David Cook announced that he will possibly come to Manila on the first quarter of 2009. Everybody got so excited then, yet, he was not able to show up maybe due to other priorities and constraints.
And then just few weeks ago, not sure if the announcement came directly from Jomari Yllana, but there were hearsays that he’ll be the one producing David Cook’s concert and this time, he’ll be with David Archuleta.
With the recent happenings and updates, I think the long wait is over as David Cook and David Archuleta made a confirmation through their video blog entry (which can also be found on youtube).
David Cook, winner of season 7 of American Idol, is coming to Manila soon, together with his runner-up David Archuleta. The upcoming concert will be on May 16 at the SM Mall of Asia Open Grounds.
Tickets are now available at all Ticketnet and Ticketworld outlets.
Titanium - 12425
Platinum - 6215
VIP - 3625
Gold - 2075
Silver - 625
Bronze - 315
For inquiries or reservations, you can call Ticketnet at 911-5555, or TicketWorld at 891-9999.
SOURCE:
http://blog.edarevalo.net/david-cook-and-david-archuleta-live-in-manila-2009-rumor-on-ticket-prices/

By MURRAY EVANS, Associated Press Writer 8 hours, 41 minutes ago
Wherever Wayman Tisdale went, whatever he was doing, chances were he was smiling.
Tisdale was a three-time All-American at Oklahoma in the mid-1980s before playing a dozen years in the NBA and later becoming an accomplished jazz musician.
But those who knew Tisdale, who died Friday at a hospital in his hometown of Tulsa, Okla., recalled not only his professional gifts but a perpetually sunny outlook, even in the face of a two-year battle with cancer that took his life at 44.
“I don’t know of any athlete at Oklahoma or any place else who was more loved by the fans who knew him than Wayman Tisdale,” said Billy Tubbs, who coached Tisdale with the Sooners. “He was obviously, a great, great player, but Wayman as a person overshadowed that. He just lit up a room and was so positive.”
Jeff Capel, the current Oklahoma coach, noted Tisdale’s “incredible gift of making the people who came in contact with him feel incredibly special.”
After three years at Oklahoma, Tisdale played in the NBA with the Indiana Pacers, Sacramento Kings and Phoenix Suns. The 6-foot-9 forward, with a soft left-handed touch on the court, averaged 15.3 points for his career. He was on the U.S. team that won the gold medal in the 1984 Olympics.
Gov. Brad Henry attended Oklahoma at the same time Tisdale did and later appointed him to the state’s Tourism Commission.
“Oklahoma has lost one of its most beloved sons,” Henry said. “Wayman Tisdale was a hero both on and off the basketball court. … Even in the most challenging of times, he had a smile for people, and he had the rare ability to make everyone around him smile. He was one of the most inspirational people I have ever known.”
State senators paused and prayed Friday morning after learning of his death.
Tisdale learned he had cancerous cyst below his right knee after breaking his leg in a fall at his home in Los Angeles on Feb. 8, 2007. He said then he was fortunate to have discovered the cancer early.
“Nothing can change me,” Tisdale told The Associated Press last June. “You go through things. You don’t change because things come in your life. You get better because things come in your life.”
His leg was amputated last August and a prosthetic leg that he wore was crimson, one of Oklahoma’s colors. He attended an Oklahoma City Thunder game April 7 and later that month was honored at the Greenwood Cultural Center in Tulsa. During the ceremony, he spoke about his cancer, saying “In my mind, I’ve beaten it.”
He recently told Tulsa television station KTUL he had acute esophagitis, which prevented him from eating for about five weeks and led to significant weight loss. Among the causes of that condition are infections, medications, radiation therapy and systemic disease.
Last month, Tisdale was chosen for induction into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.
He was the first freshman to be a first-team All-American since freshmen were allowed to play again in the 1971-72 season. He was also one of 10 three-time All-Americans. Patrick Ewing and Tisdale were the last to accomplish the feat, from 1983-85.
“On the court, he was an offensive machine that could score with the best of them,” said Dallas Mavericks president Donnie Nelson, an assistant on Tisdale’s Suns teams. “Off the court, he was grounded in faith and family.”
Tisdale played on an Olympic team that sailed to the gold medal in Los Angeles. The squad was coached by Bob Knight and featured the likes of Ewing, Michael Jordan, Sam Perkins and Chris Mullin.
“Wayman was kind of a catalyst for people accepting roles,” said C.M. Newton, the manager of the ’84 team and now chairman of the NIT selection committee. “Michael was the leader of the team but Wayman was special in that way.”
Perkins and Tisdale shared a love of music and became friends during the Olympics. Perkins later was the best man at Tisdale’s wedding.
“That’s a real friend who’s got your back and would do just about anything for you,” Perkins said. “That smile just gets you.”
As a musician, Tisdale recorded eight albums. A bass guitarist who often wrote his own material, his most recent album, “Rebound,” was inspired by his fight with cancer and included guest appearances by several artists, including saxophonist Dave Koz and country star and fellow Oklahoma native Toby Keith.
His “Way Up!” release debuted in July 2006 and spent four weeks as the No. 1 contemporary jazz album. His hits included “Ain’t No Stopping Us Now,” “Can’t Hide Love” and “Don’t Take Your Love Away.”
“He was truly an inspiration to me, paving the way for an athlete like myself to pursue a passion for writing and performing music,” said Bernie Williams, the former New York Yankees star turned jazz musician. “I had the honor and privilege of having Wayman perform on the title track of my new album, and was looking forward to collaborating with him again.”
Tisdale averaged 25.6 points and 10.1 rebounds during his three seasons with the Sooners, earning Big Eight Conference player of the year each season.
He still holds Oklahoma’s career records for points and rebounds. Tisdale also owns the school’s single-game scoring mark—61 points against Texas-San Antonio as a sophomore—and career marks for points per game, field goals and free throws made and attempts.
In 1997, Tisdale became the first Oklahoma player in any sport to have his jersey number retired. Two years ago, then-freshman Blake Griffin asked Tisdale for permission to wear No. 23, which Tisdale granted. Griffin went on to become the consensus national player of the year this past season as a sophomore.
“I spoke with him pretty frequently this past season and he helped me in ways he probably doesn’t even know,” Griffin said.
Tisdale is survived by his wife, Regina, and four children.
Associated Press Writer Ron Jenkins in Oklahoma City and AP Sports Writers Jeff Latzke in Oklahoma City, Larry Lage in Detroit, Jim O’Connell in New York, Doug Tucker in Kansas City, Mo., Cliff Brunt in Indianapolis and Jaime Aron in Dallas contributed to this report.
SOURCE: http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-obit-tisdale&prov=ap&type=lgns
AFP - May 11, 2009
COLOMBO (AFP) - – Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels on Sunday accused the government of killing more than 2,000 civilians in 24 hours of artillery attacks, but the military denied the allegations.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said in a statement posted on the Tamilnet website that the army had unleashed a devastating offensive on the small coastal patch of land that the rebels still control.
"More than 2,000 innocent civilians have been killed in the last 24 hours," Tamilnet quoted S. Pathmanathan, the rebels' chief arms smuggler, as saying.
The website said 257 bodies had been brought to a makeshift hospital that was overwhelmed with hundreds of injured casualties.
Many of the dead were "found in bunkers and inside the tarpaulin tents," it said.
The military dismissed the claims as propaganda, and said the guerrillas themselves had carried out the attack using mortars "to tarnish the image of the security forces in the eyes of the public nationally and internationally."
Sunday's conflicting claims were characteristic of the war, in which independent reporting is impossible as journalists are banned from travelling freely in the area.
A British television news team was expelled from Sri Lanka on Sunday after it broadcast allegations of poor treatment of the 200,000 Tamils who are being held in state-run camps after fleeing the fighting.
The report, shown on Channel 4, contained allegations of sexual abuse and claims of dead bodies being left where they fell, as well as water and food shortfalls -- all of which Colombo has denied.
Sri Lanka's leaders believe the military is on the verge of defeating the Tamil rebels, who are holed up on the northeastern coast of the island, after 37 years of conflict.
At the height of their power in 2006, the Tigers -- who want an independent Tamil homeland in the Sinhalese-majority island -- controlled roughly a third of the island.
The Sri Lankan government has refused all international calls for a ceasefire despite reports from the United Nations last month saying up to 6,500 civilians may have been killed and 14,000 wounded in fighting since January.
It has also turned down requests by the UN to send humanitarian officials into the rebel territory, where the UN estimates about 50,000 civilians are trapped.
The government says the number of civilians being held by the Tigers as "human shields" is less than 20,000.
Defence officials reported on Sunday that troops had advanced further despite fierce rebel resistance.
The Sri Lankan army also said it had uncovered a bizarre contraption that could have been intended as an underwater bunker for the elusive leader of the rebels.
The 360-foot (110-metre) long railway carriage-like construction may have been designed to be wheeled under the sea as a hiding place for Velupillai Prabhakaran, the army said.
Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake told parliament last week that Prabhakaran, 54, was still leading his men.
Prabhakaran has not been seen for more than 18 months, and speculation has been rife that he may have been killed or already fled the island.
SOUCE: http://asia.news.yahoo.com/afp/20090510/twl-srilanka-unrest-4bdc673.html
Armoured arctic arachnids, the big-game hunter's dream
Danish boffins have uncovered an unforeseen, extra downside of the melting of the Arctic ice cap, according to reports. Not only will there be sea level rises and massive flooding*; there will also be a plague of enormous, invulnerable, heavily armoured meat-eating cannibal spiders.
The worrying yet exciting news comes courtesy of National Geographic, which has been speaking to top arachno-boffin Toke HĆøye of Aarhus University. HĆøye has spent ten years studying the flesh-eating "wolf" spider Pardosa glacialis which lives in Greenland, north of the Arctic circle.
Disturbingly, the Scandinavian spider specialist reports that over that period the polar arachnids have increased significantly in size - and correspondingly increased the thickness of their exoskeletal armour plates. In just one warm year, it seems, you can see a 10 per cent increase: and over the decade that HĆøye has been visiting the Greenland spider colonies there has been a 2 per cent upward trend, which he puts down to global warming.
On its own this is quite bad enough. We here on the Reg big-game and military tech desk calculate that if the spider-wolves of the Arctic grow by 10 per cent annually**, in just fifty years they will be the size of Humvees. But it gets worse: oh yes.
We aren't just looking at a swarming, ravenous horde of hairy meat-eating arachnids the size of offroad vehicles. That would be easy to deal with, as a well-placed slug from a big-bore rifle would put such a creature down. Big-game hunters worldwide would rush to Greenland to join in the sport; every sportsman's entrance hall would be adorned with enormous spider-head trophies; wealthy socialite ladies would wear fur coats made of Arctic wolfspider-hair.
By the year 2070 or so, mournful Eskimo trackers would point dolefully across the empty prairies of Greenland, where once the mighty herds of flesh-eating buffalo-sized spiders had roamed - after the glaciers left, but before the hunters came.
So, basically no problem. But in fact, these spiders aren't going to be nearly as easy to kill as a buffalo or a charging elephant. A measly .50-calibre express bullet isn't going to knock one of these puppies down, no sir.
Why? Because spiders, as everyone knows, can actually extrude bulletproof-vest material out of their arses: True fact. And all their hard body structure is worn on the outside, as an exoskeleton, thus forming a natural coat of armour plate.
Thus when the mighty hordes of four-metre-long spiders appear in 2060 or so, they will - by our calculations - be plated with 26cm arachnocomposite protection, in the same league as or better than modern ceramic body armour but immensely thicker.
They'll be as hard to take out as a tank. This won't be a jolly day's sport blasting away with a heavy rifle: nothing short of a hypervelocity depleted-uranium penetrator, a volley of antitank missiles or a huge roadside bomb is going to stop one of these. Dealing with a spider infestation is going to be like stopping a Nazi panzer blitzkrieg.
It's always possible that humanity will be saved by radical big-game hunters mounted in battle tanks or attack helicopters - or possibly ones gutsier still, who insist on taking their arachnid trophies on foot using man-portable antitank weapons for ultimate kudos. But it sounds like an expensive and dangerous hobby.
As the National Geographic points out, we might do better to hope that the spiders' natural cannibalistic propensities come into play. Pardosa glacialis are apparently well known for snacking on their young, and (among the females) on insufficiently alert sexual partners. Enormous and correspondingly peckish lady spiders might control most of the rest of their species for us, leaving only relatively small numbers to be occasionally culled by game wardens armed with cruise missiles. ®
*Before you all start going on about floating ice, do please remember that much of the arctic ice cap sits on Greenland.
**Naturally we haven't chosen to use the more realistic 2 per cent per decade figure, as it is boring.
The rock-loving 17-year-old was eliminated from the Fox singing competition on Wednesday, and the eighth season of “Idol” will have an all-guy final. The three competitors left are Danny Gokey, Kris Allen and Lambert.
“Idol” has been notably scandal-free this season, but leave it to Paula Abdul to drum up some headlines just before her first performance on the show, which took place on Wednesday.
After years of denying that she has ever had a problem with prescription drugs, she told Ladies Home Journal that – wait for it – she had a problem with prescription drugs and went to rehab last year to kick it.
"I could have killed myself," Abdul told the magazine. "Withdrawal – it's the worst thing. I was freezing cold, then sweating hot, then chattering and in so much pain. It was excruciating."
What are the odds of such a revelation coming around the time she put out a new single – the vapid single that she performed on “Idol”? Sigh.
As St. Petersburg Times critic Eric Deggans put it in a Wednesday piece, “there is no celebrity cannier than a threatened one, and with her ‘Idol’ contract ending this year, a fourth judge ready to fill the void and a new album dropping, Abdul recognizes the value in coming clean now -- both to make it harder for ‘Idol’ to fire her and to stoke interest in her new work.”
Speaking of scandals, there was a mini-brouhaha a couple of months ago when the “Idol” producers finally admitted that the contestants lip sync during those cheeseball group production numbers. Is anyone even going to try to make the case that Abdul sang live during Wednesday’s show? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
It sure sounded like a heavily processed vocal track played as Abdul cavorted around the stage with a troupe of male dancers and “sang.”
Who knows why, but No Doubt also performed during Wednesday’s show. Perhaps the performance of a 14-year-old “No Doubt” hit, “Just a Girl,” was meant to get “Gossip Girl” fans primed for the band’s appearance (as Snowed Out) in Monday’s episode of the CW show, which is set in the 1980s. Also performing his particular brand of dude-rock was “Idol” veteran Chris Daughtry.
But there’s no doubt, really, about what were the best performances of the week: Lambert’s credible and entertaining cover of “Whole Lotta Love” and Lambert and Iraheta’s energetic duet on “Slow Ride."
It’s clear that the competition is Lambert’s to lose. I still think he flirts with the audience more than he needs to, but there’s no denying his stage presence, charisma and vocal talent.
In my opinion, the identity of the “Idol” winner is a foregone conclusion: It has to be Lambert. The only suspense at this point concerns how many minutes “Idol” will overrun its time slot during the May 20 finale.
In that direction, however, things may be looking up: Wednesday’s “Idol,” mercifully, ended on time.
SOURCE: http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2009/05/american-idol-adam-lambert-allison-iraheta.html
ARCADIA, Mo. – Thirsty, dirty and tired after spending two days and nights barely clothed in the wet, chilly woods of Mark Twain National Forest, 3-year-old Joshua Childers was ready to go home.
The boy was lying on the ground of a hollow near a creek bottom Wednesday afternoon when a volunteer searcher spied his bare bottom.
"Hey, bud!" called out Donnie Halpin, a 57-year-old construction worker from nearby Fredericktown, who wasn't sure whether the grimy figure was even alive.
But Joshua sat right up and grinned at his rescuer.
"You ready to go home?" Halpin asked.
"Yeah," said Joshua.
The boy was wet and only wearing a T-shirt and one tennis shoe. Halpin called 911, then wrapped the child in his shirt, scooped him up and carried him about a half-mile to a house.
By Allison LopezPhilippine Daily Inquirer
Posted date: May 04, 2009
The next day, the delegates will meet with city government officials to share their best practices in governance, followed by a tour of Makati.
At around 4 p.m. on the same day, a Flores de Mayo procession will be held from Rockwell Center to Ayala Center followed at 7 p.m. by a performance of traditional Filipino love songs during the “Aawitan Kita” concert at the University of Makati.
Shoppers, on the other hand, will be treated to a grand anniversary sale at Glorietta from May 7 to 9.
On May 8, elaborate-designed floats and participants dressed in costumes will join the annual grand parade on Ayala Avenue with “Celebrate Progress and Service to the People” as the theme. Delegates from Makati’s sister-cities and municipalities will also be joining the parade.
“Once again, it is our honor to host our sister-cities and municipalities on our Foundation Day. We are fortunate to have them again this year and we look forward to sharing expertise and best practices with them,” Binay said.
Barangay (Village) Bel-Air’s “Pasinaya 2009,” or the celebration of the barangay’s own feast day, will also kick off on May 8 and run until the 10th, where a chalk art exhibition will be held on Ayala Avenue at 7 a.m. This will be followed by a brass band competition at Ayala corner Paseo de Roxas at 3 p.m.
The city government will host a Mega Job Fair on May 15 at the City Hall Quadrangle while a “Family Day” filled with games and surprises will be held on May 17 at the same venue.
CLEVELAND - When Connie Culp heard a little kid call her a monster because of the shotgun blast that left her face horribly disfigured, she pulled out her driver’s license to show the child what she used to look like. Years later, as the nation’s first face transplant recipient, she’s stepped forward to show the rest of the world what she looks like now.
Her expressions are still a bit wooden, but she can talk, smile, smell and taste her food again. Her speech is at times a little tough to understand. Her face is bloated and squarish. Her skin droops in big folds that doctors plan to pare away as her circulation improves and her nerves grow, animating her new muscles.
But Culp had nothing but praise for those who made her new face possible.
Round 1 (Manny -10 points; Ricky - 7 points)
A recap on Round 1:
“I’m confident I will win,” Pacquiao said. “I’ve worked hard for the past eight weeks, looked at a lot of his fights, and I’m ready to fight.”
CDC continues to issue and update interim guidance daily in response to the rapidly evolving situation. Early this morning, CDC provided interim guidance on school closures. Supplies from CDC’s Division of the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) are being sent to all 50 states and U.S. territories to help them respond to the outbreak. In addition, the Federal Government and manufacturers have begun the process of developing a vaccine against this new virus.
Response actions are aggressive, but they may vary across states and communities depending on local circumstances. Communities, businesses, places of worship, schools and individuals can all take action to slow the spread of this outbreak. People who are sick are urged to stay home from work or school and to avoid contact with others, except to seek medical care. This action can avoid spreading illness further.
This event will be held on July 27, 2008 from 5:30-8:00 p.m. at the Shinbashi Kumin Kaikan (Tel. no. 03-3444-0461) near Ebisu Station, located at 1-27-10 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo. It is a 10- minute walk from Ebisu Station of JR and Hibiya Lines, or a 2-minute walk from the Ebisubashi Stop of the Tokyo Metro bus. For particulars, please contact 03-3491-2408 / Crusade for the Protection of Philippine Interests in Japan.
BACKGROUND (from Press Release):
China's ZTE Corporation and Arroyo Government's Broadband Corruption Scandal Witness, Jun Lozada, to Talk Live in Tokyo
Controversies behind the 329-M dollar Zhong Xing Telecommunications Equipment Limited (ZTE) National Broadband Network contract signed by the Philippine and Chinese governments, witnessed personally by President Arroyo, last April 2007 in China are facts that need to be learned by Filipinos as well as the general public in Japan.
Rodolfo "Jun" Lozada, by his professional affinity to Economic Planning Secretary on-leave Romulo Neri, became intimately involved in the back room (and under-the-table) deal-making. Lozada has so far revealed that the project, by his reckoning, should really have cost about $132-M but that the amount had ballooned to $239-M due to "advances" to the project "fixer/s" including an alleged $130-M "commission" for Mr. Benjamin Abalos, Sr.
Lozada further claims having gotten "instructions" from Secretary Neri to "moderate the greed" of the actors in the scam. Lozada has also said under oath that the "dysfunctional supply-instead-of-need-driven government procurement system" also resulted in kickback-inflated costs in the South and North Luzon Railroad rehabilitation and extension projects, also funded from generous loans from China.
Posted by tpbnt on 07/02/2008 08:09 PM [1075 views]
Judy Ann was resplendent and radiant in a white wedding gown designed by popular and sought-after fashion designer Paul Cabral.
The church in San Juan, Batangas, is where Ryan’s parents Luis and Nina Agoncillo also got married.
The wedding entourage included just very close friends and relatives. Among the principal sponsors were a brother of Judy Ann's mom Carol; a photographer named Bembem Bautista; movie/TV director Rory Quintos, Benjie Gonzales, Ryan's uncle from the US; Jane Buencamino, Judy Ann's Road Manager; Mon Isberto of Smart Communications and GMA 7 TV host Susie Entrata-Abrera.
Breakfast reception was held at the Balay Laiya, also in San Juan, and this was where this writer caught up with Lorenzo and Alcasid while they were having their meal. Really clueless, Lorenzo revealed he was just fetched for the wedding Tuesday. “Mali lahat ang mga lumabas tungkol sa wedding nila,” he laughed.
There will be two other wedding receptions. The May 2 reception at Rockwell Plant will be for the couple's showbiz friends and colleagues, while the next one will be for their fans and the media and entertainment press.
Concern that the world could be on the brink of the first influenza pandemic in more than 40 years escalated Sunday as France, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Spain reported potential new cases in which people had been infected with swine flu and Canada confirmed several new cases. In the U.S., where 20 such infections have been confirmed, federal health officials declared a public-health emergency and are preparing to distribute to state and local agenciesa quarter of the country's 50 million-dose stockpile of antiviral drugs. Meanwhile, in hard-hit Mexico, where more than 80 people have died from what is believed to be swine flu, the government closed all public schools and canceled hundreds of public events in Mexico City.
Health officials in Washington were quick to point out Sunday that none of the 20 cases identified in the U.S. so far has been fatal; all but one of the victims has recovered without needing to be hospitalized. Officials also noted that only one American has been infected so far who had not recently traveled to Mexico - a woman in Kansas got sick after her husband returned from a business trip in that country, where he became ill - but that could change as more intensive disease surveillance begins. "As we continue to look for more cases, I expect we're going to find them," said acting Centers for Disease Control (CDC) director Richard Besser.
But Washington officials Sunday did their best not to overstate the situation and emphasized that their response wasn't out of the ordinary. "I wish we could call it declaration of emergency preparedness, because that's really what it is in this context," said Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. "We're preparing in an environment where we really don't know ultimately what the size or seriousness of this outbreak is going to be."
1. Is this a flu pandemic?
The influenza virus is constantly mutating. That's why we can't get full immunity to the flu, the way we can to diseases like chicken pox, because there are multiple strains of the flu virus and they change from year to year. However, even though the virus makes us sick, our immune systems can usually muster enough of a response so that the flu is rarely fatal for healthy people.
But every once in awhile, the virus shifts its genetic structure so much that our immune systems offer no protection whatsoever. (This usually happens when a flu virus found in animals - like the avian flu still circulating in Asia - swaps genes with other viruses in a process called reassortment, and jumps to human beings.) A flu pandemic occurs when a new flu virus emerges for which humans have little or no immunity and then spreads easily from person to person around the world. In the 20th century we had two mild flu pandemics, in 1968 and 1957, and the severe "Spanish flu" pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 40 to 50 million people worldwide.
As health officials have repeatedly emphasized, with good reason, the swine flu situation is evolving rapidly, and more lab tests are needed to ascertain exactly what is going on in Mexico and elsewhere. "We want to make sure we're on solid ground," said Fukuda, a highly respected former CDC official and flu expert.
Of course, declaring a pandemic isn't a decision that should be taken lightly. For the WHO, phase 4 might trigger an attempt to keep the virus from spreading by instituting strict quarantines and blanketing infected areas with antivirals. But we appear to have missed the opportunity to contain the disease at its source since the virus is already crossing borders with ease. "We cannot stop this at the border," said Anne Schuchat, the CDC's interim director for science and public health. "We don't think that we can quench this in Mexico if it's in many communities now."
3. Why have the U.S. cases been so much milder than the ones in Mexico?
This is the question that has health officials from Geneva to Washington puzzled. In Mexico, swine flu has caused severe respiratory disease in a number of patients - and even more worryingly, has killed the sort of young and healthy people who can normally shrug off the flu. (Fueling such concerns is the fact that similar age groups died in unusually high numbers during the 1918 pandemic.) Yet the cases in the U.S. have all been mild and likely wouldn't have even garnered much attention if doctors hadn't begun actively looking for swine flu in recent days. "What we're seeing in this country so far is not anywhere near the severity of what we're hearing about in Mexico," said the CDC's Besser. "We need to understand that."
4. How ready is the U.S. - and the world - to respond to a flu pandemic?
In some ways, the world is better prepared for a flu pandemic today than it has ever been. Thanks to concerns over H5N1 avian flu, the WHO, the U.S. and countries around the world have stockpiled millions of doses of antivirals that can help fight swine flu as well as other strains of influenza. The U.S. has a detailed pandemic preparation plan that was drafted under former President George W. Bush. Many other countries have similar plans. SARS and bird flu have given international health officials useful practice runs for dealing with a real pandemic. We can identify new viruses faster than ever before, and we have life-saving technologies - like artificial respirators and antivirals - that weren't available back in 1918. "I believe that the world is much, much better prepared than we have ever been for dealing with this kind of situation," said Fukuda.
At the same time, the very nature of globalization puts us at greater risk. International air travel means that infections can spread very quickly. And while the WHO can prepare a new swine flu vaccine strain in fairly short order, we still use a laborious, decades-old process to manufacture vaccines, meaning it would take months before the pharmaceutical industry could produce its full capacity of doses - and even then, there wouldn't be enough for everyone on the planet. The U.S. could be particularly vulnerable; only one plant, in Stillwater, Penn., makes flu vaccine in America. In a pandemic, that could produce some ugly political debates. "Do you really think the E.U. is going to release pandemic vaccine to the U.S. when its own people need it?" asks Osterholm.















