Edge Davao 6 Issue 51

Page 1

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

www.edgedavao.net

P 15.00 • 20 PAGES

EDGEDAVAO Serving a seamless society

CASH VERSUS CARD

Why is Davao still a cash economy? By Neil Bravo

D

avao City is still a cash society, far from the global trend of card economy.

Tjader P. Regis, marketing director of NCCC Group of Companies, revealed that Davao remains a cash economy with only around 20 percent of consumers engaged regularly in card transactions. The NCCC Group of Companies runs such retail chains as the NCCC

Mall Davao, Choice Supermarket and HB1. Despite the trend in global commerce, Davao has not yet reached the level where it has accepted the use of cards and electronic transaction platforms according to Regis. “It’s still 80-20 (cash to card ratio),” said Regis during the official announcement of the NCCC-EC PayGaTE Distribution partnership on Thursday.

among the contributory factors for Davao economy being cashbased are largely due to the attitude of Dabawenyos to shop with cash and the limited accessibility to credit card subscription due to the stringent screening process banks put premium on card approvals. The low penetration rate, however, still reflects the current low penetration rate of e-commerce in the Philippines which is presently at 3

percent. Market analysts, nevertheless, foresee things to change with the current tremendous growth of internet usage in the country. The increase in internet usage is felt more noticeably in electronic transactions. Regis said more Dabawenyos use electronic transactions in paying their bills. Utilities like electricity, telecommunications, and cable tele-

FCASH VERSUS CARD, 10


2 THE BIG NEWS

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

BLESSING. DMC Urban Property Developers Inc. (DMCI) Mindanao general manager Nora Gutierrez (front) accompanies officiating priest Fr. Bong Gonzaga during the blessing rites of DMCI’s latest condominium project, Polmetto Place’s Piedmont building in Ma-a, Davao City on Friday. Lean Daval Jr.

Scholarships granted to 13 Pablo survivors

In Region 11

2,923 public school T teachers needed By Che Palicte

T

HE Department of Education (DepEd) 11 says it needs 2,923 public school teachers in the elementary and secondary levels for school year 2013-2014. Jeneilito atillo, spokesperson of DepEd

11, said during the Kapihan sa Philippine Information agency (PIa) at the abreeza Mall in Bajada, Davao City last Friday that this is the first time in the history of the department that they need that many teachers because of the

Shades of Oklahoma

Twister ravages urban village in S. Cotabato

a

strong tornado ravaged an urban village in Polomolok town in South Cotabato on Friday afternoon, damaging 38 houses and other structures in the area, an official said on Saturday. antonio octavio, chair of Barangay Cannery Site in Polomolok, said the twister, which came following a heavy downpour, pummeled a portion of Purok People’s village and neighboring communities at around 1 p.m. He said no casualties were reported following the incident, but noted that 8 of the 38 affected houses and buildings in the area were totally

damaged. a report released by the office of Civil Defense (oCD) of Region 12 on Saturday morning said 140 families were victims of the tornado which left an estimated damage valued at P600,000. Some of the affected families are taking temporary shelter at the barangay hall. South Cotabato governor-elect and outgoing second district Rep. Daisy avance-Fuentes and Polomolok mayor-elect Honey Lumayag-Matti have sent additional relief goods to augment the needs of the evacuees. [allen v. Estabillo / MindaNews]

“K+12” program implementation. The K to 12 Program covers kindergarten and 12 years of basic education (six years primary education, four years junior high school, and two years senior high school

[SHS]) to provide sufficient time for mastery of concepts and skills, develop lifelong learners, and prepare graduates for tertiary education, middle-level skills development, employment, and entrepreneurship.

F2,923 PUBLIC SCHOOL, 10

BENEFICIARIES. Students from Datu Ladayon High School scan the array of notebooks on display at the atrium of a mall in J.P. Laurel Avenue, Davao

HE Philippine Military academy (PMa) “DIMaLUPIG” class of 1981 along with the armed Forces of the Philippines (aFP) Educational Benefit System office (aFPEBSo) granted 13 young survivors of typhoon Pablo scholarships for elementary and college last Friday afternoon at the Naval Forces of Eastern Mindanao (NFEM) in Panacan, Davao City. Five scholars are from Cateel, Davao oriental and eight from Compostela valley Province. The aFP said in a statement that the program was initiated by the “DIMaLUPIG” class of ‘81 whose class fund amounting P1 million will be channeled through the aFBESCo

which is an aFP organization that grants educational benefits to dependents of military personnel. The statement signed by Captain Raul villegas, spokesperson of the 10th Infantry Division, said that Lt. Col. Danilo Estrañero, the assistant general manager of aFPEBSo, bared that the partnership signifies the start of a noble effort in innovation and collaboration to provide assistance to orphaned victims of typhoon Pablo. villegas said the 12 scholars are all orphaned, with one or both parents having died or declared missing during the onslaught of typhoon Pablo and they will be given educational assistance until they graduate. CMP

City yesterday. The students received school supplies after chosen as beneficiary of a popular television program. Lean Daval Jr.


EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013 THE BIGGER PICTURE

3

Davao ICT industry

More players coming in By Greg G. Deligero

T

HE Information Communication Technology (ICT) industry here continues to be a key driver of the local economy with new players coming in, pouring in huge investments and generating employment opportunities. Teolulo T. Pasawa, Davao City field office chief of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said two new business process outsourcing (BPo) companies are now setting up their facilities in the city with around 2,500 seats combined capacity. only last week, Pasawa said two other BPo companies— a Manila-based company and a Japanese firm—had expressed intention to establish branches in the city with a combined 1,000-seat capacity. “It is an indicator of how attractive Davao City is to ICT investors,” he said. Davao City was recently identified as one of the country’s outstanding BPo destinations by the Department of Science and Technology (DoST. It is included in the list as among the “Top 10 Next Wave Cities (NWC) in the information technology and business-process management (IT-BPM) sector.” The rest of the

cities are Baguio, Dumaguete, Iloilo, Lipa, Metro Bulacan, Metro Cavite, Metro Laguna, Metro Naga and Metro Rizal. The 10 were picked by the DoST’s information and communications technology office (ICTo) and the IT and Business Process association of the Philippines (IBPaP) for their potential on talent, infrastructure, cost and business environment, and risk management. as early as 2009, Davao City was included among the world’s 31 new emerging destinations for information technology and business process outsourcing in the KPMG’s Exploring Global Frontiers IT advisory. Likewise, Davao City made it into the 2013 Tholons Top 100 outsourcing Destinations. only seven Philippine cities made it to the Top 100 List, namely: Baguio, Bacolod, Iloilo, Sta. Rosa, Davao, Cebu, and Metro Manila. Records obtained from the business bureau show that there are currently 94 ICT companies operating in Davao City engaged in software, graphics and content development, data entry and transcription, contact centers, graphics and animation and engineering and design process.

The BPos or contact centers subsector comprise 20 percent of the total number of ICT companies pouring in a total of P646 million worth of investments. Some of the major players in the subsector are Sutherland, Concentrix, Cybercity, vXI Global, Six Eleven, Callbox, and opinionology. other contact centers which have expressed intention to establish branches in the city are Convergy’s, Teletech, Teleperformance, Startek and Stream Global. The ICT industry’s current employment

contribution to Davao City is around 16,000 full time employees, more than 90 percent of whom are employed in the voice sector (contact centers), the fastest growing sub-sector of ICT. Pasawa said one of Davao City’s advantages is the availability of a highly talented workforce. “one of the qualities of Davao is the abundance of talents,” he said. In its asia Cities of the Future awards of 2007-2008, Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) ranked Davao City in the Top 5 Best

in Human Resource, and No. 1 in asian Youngest Cities. Davao has the largest talent pool among all of the Philippines Next Wave Cities, with more than half of the city’s population in the 17-24 age group in college education. Davao’s high literacy rate accounts for the nearly 470,000 high-quality workers. It is a major destination for work for the 22 million people living in the Southeastern Philippines and is host to more than forty 40 colleges and universities producing graduates between

12,000-15,000 each year in the fields of information technology, business management, engineering, finance and accounting, education and allied health among others. another advantage is the identification of the ICT industry as one of the four priority industries of the local government that are being focused for promotion. as a priority industry, the local government of Davao has provided a set of fiscal and non-fiscal incentives for companies that will invest in ICT/BPo projects.


4 SUBURBIA EDGEDAVAO Returnees start new life with gov’t assistance T VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

Wo rebel returnees began a new chapter in their life with the P50,000 assistance each they received from the government under the comprehensive local integration program (CLIP) of the office of Presidential adviser on the Peace Process (oPaPP). Mario, not his real name, said he will use the aid to repair their small house and to rehabilitate their one-hectare farm that was damaged by Typhoon Pablo last December. He will also allot a portion of the money for the enrollment of his kids. The 40-year old father of six was a communist rebel for two years until he was

convinced by his wife to return to the fold of the law in early 2011. He shared the insurgents, who capitalized on his poverty, had tricked him into joining the movement by false promise of monthly stipend for his family. However, he only received a one month worth of compensation during his stint with the armed struggle. “Dako ang among pasalamat nga gihatagan mi ug kahigayonan nga mubalik sa sabakan ug nga adunay pa ju’y pakapin nga ayuda sa gobyerno (We are grateful for being given the chance to be back to the fold and receive some livelihood assistance),” Mario said. at the same time, his comrade Michael,

ASSISTANCE. Gov. Rodolfo del Rosario hands out P50,000 livelihood assistance to the rebel returnees, as 60th IB Commander Col. Llewelyn Binasoy and Pro-

RETURNEES. The rebel returnees, who received P50,000 livelihood assistance from OPAPP, are flanked by Gov. Rodolfo del Rosario, 60th IB Commander Col. Llewelyn Binasoy, DILG Provincial Director Alex Roldan, DNPPO

Deputy Director Jesse Estrada, Provincial Social Welfare and Development Officer Arlene Semblante and Major Harold Ho.

28, plans to use the

ernor said. Del Rosario handed out the checks to the surenderees, in the presence of 60th IB Commander Col. Llewelyn Binasoy, DILG Provincial Director alex Roldan, DNPPo Deputy Director Jesse Estrada and Provincial Social Welfare and Development officer arlene Semblante. Binasoy said the assistance intends to ensure the returnees will not longer go back to the mountains.

Davao del Norte gained the prominence of having the biggest number of returnees in the Davao region last year. Some 73 rebels surrendered in the province in the first half of 2012 alone. The governor attributed the number to the success of the convergence for peace and development program of the province, which adapted the army’s peace and development outreach program (PDoP). [Noel Baguio]

were built in Monkayo and 20 units in Poblacion New Bataan. In october of the same year, 50 units of houses were constructed in Laak. In 2011, 38 units were constructed at Compostela in april and 40 units in august. and in 2012, there were 28 houses built in Mabini in the month of May and 40 units in Tuboran, Mawab in November. This year 2013, another 50 units were added at the S.o.P. Kahiusahan USWaG GK village in Brgy. osmeña, Compostela. Meanwhile, the provincial government has widened its educational programs ranging from scholarship, special program for employment of students during summer to on-the-job trainings, English proficiency, and reading programs. Project aRTURo (accelerated Readers, Tomorrow’s Ultimate

Response to opportunities) which is now on its second phase, has opened opportunities not only for the pupils whose reading skills will be developed but for the reading teachers as well to enhance their teaching skills. In august 2012, after the launching of Project aRTURo 2, the PLGU identified 9 pilot school recipients and were assigned with trained and competent Reading Teachers. Series of assessment Meetings and Progress Reports are conducted from time to time by Dr. Lillian C. Calicdan, the Program Coordinator to keep track with the reading development of these pilot schools. Being a reading development program, Project aRTURo 2 not only focuses on teaching a child how to read but to comprehend what he reads. [Grace almedilla, IDS-Comval]

vincial Social Welfare and Development Officer Arlene Semblante cheer on. nobags

money to start his own swine production. The former rebels bared their plans in response to Governor Rodolfo del Rosario’s challenge for them to put the assistance to good use. “Salamat kay naminaw kamo sa among hangyo kaninyo aron mobalik ug makiguban kanamo alang sa kalinaw ug kalambuan (Thanks for heeding our call for you to give up and join us in pursuing peace and development),” the gov-

DepED orders no clean-ups More families benefit from ComVal’s housing program on day of class opening

N

o teachers should be seen either cleaning the classroom or the school ground on June 3, Davao del Norte Department of Education (DepEd) Schools Division superintendent Dr. Josephine Fadul said. She cautioned public school teachers whom she expected to start the regular classes of school year 2012-2013 on June 3. In an interview she bared plans to move around and check public elementary and secondary schools placed under the supervision of Davao del Norte Schools Division, whether teachers are indeed holding classes. She expressed the warning for teachers but she was confident that public schools in her divi-

sion would be able to start off the classes well on June 3, barely two weeks from now, because “schools are clean and prepared”. Dr. Fadul noted high response of stakeholders in this week’s Brigada Eskwela as it generated participation of groups not very much active in the past such as the civil engineers, members of the Sangguniang Kabataan (SK), the Karancho, the school alumni, the military , among other groups. She also knew of local government officials who distributed donations to public schools. “It’s very heart-warming. We have raised the level of awareness and involvement of the community. We are really dependent on the support of the community,” she said. Taking part in the Brigada Eskwela has be-

come a “moral and social obligation that those who have much are duty-bound to share,” she said. Fadul explained that improvement of a public schools involves the participation and cooperation of not only the parents and teachers but all sectors in the community. “The less stake, less is gained,” she said in explaining the big boost to public school improvement if the community shows involvement. as a particular instance, she bared the Tuganay Elementary School as among the public schools she expected to grab a Brigada Eskwela award due to high level of community participation and number of received donations. [Jean Duron abangan/ PIa 11]

F

IvE Hundred Eighteen poor families in Compostela valley Province have benefited from the housing program of the provincial government initiated by Governor arturo T. Uy. In his aim to provide comfortable shelters for the poorest of the poor families in the province for free, the provincial government has partnered with GK Foundation and come up with USWaG Gawad Kalinga tapping donor-partners from the different community sectors. Many generous hearts positively responded and shared their time, talents, and resources during the series of conduct of bayanihan house build. This joined efforts has able to construct 88 houses in USWaG GK Designer village and 116 units in CSaP USWaG GK village both in Brgy. Kinuban, Maco. In april 2010, another 48 units


5 THE ECONOMY Improved confidence cushions fall in March 2013 imports EDGEDAVAO

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

I

MPoRTS of raw materials and intermediate goods moderated the decrease in merchandise imports in March 2013, according to the National Economic and Development authority. “Improved consumer and business confidence lifted overseas purchases of raw materials and intermediate goods, consumer goods, and capital goods in March,” said Socioeconomic Planning Secretary arsenio M. Balisacan. Merchandise imports continued to contract in March 2013 at $4.9 billion, lower by 8.4 percent from $5.4 billon in March 2012. Imports of raw materials and intermediate goods slightly rose to $1.90 billion in March

2013 as a result of higher payments for both unprocessed (7.9%) and semi-processed raw inputs (0.6%). Payments for imported consumer goods also went up by 3.2 percent to $612.5 million in March 2013. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ Consumer Expectations Survey show that consumers generally perceived the first quarter of 2013 as a favorable time to buy durable items. also, members of the Chamber of automotive Manufacturers of the Philippines, Inc. and the association of vehicle Importers and Distributors, Inc. both reported annual increases in car sales. Likewise, import payments for capital goods

increased to $1.32 billion in March 2013, supported by gains in aircraft, ships and boats (34.8%), telecommunication equipment and electric machines (2.4%), and power generating and specialized machines. “The moderate gains in imports of capital goods mirrored the continuing expansion plans of businesses’ in the first quarter of 2013,” added Balisacan. Meanwhile, the value of imported mineral fuels and lubricants was down by 18 percent to $1 billion as lower import bill for petroleum crude (-64.7%) offset the higher import payments for other mineral fuels and lubricants (38.6%) and coal and coke (68.0%).

During the period, the price of Dubai crude fell by 13.8 percent to $105.4 per barrel following expectations of a weak global demand for the commodity. “With the decline of imports for the third consecutive month and the recovery of exports in March, our trade-in goods deficit narrowed to $2.3 billion from $2.6 billion in the same period last year,” he added. China remains the country’s top supplier of imported goods with 11.5 percent share in the total value of inward shipments in March 2013. The United States of america came next with an 11.1-percent share, followed by Taiwan (10%), Japan (9.6%), the Republic of Korea (8.5%).


6 THE ECONOMY EDGEDAVAO Stat Watch Mindanao power congress pushes for renewable energy VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

1. Gross National Income Growth Rate (At Constant 2000 Prices)

5.4 4th Qtr 2012

2. Gross Domestic Product Growth Rate (At Constant 2000 Prices)

6.8 4th Qtr 2012

3. Exports 1/ 4. Imports 1/ 5. Trade Balance 6. Balance of Payments 2/ 7. Broad Money Liabilities

USD 3,969.51 million Dec 2012 USD 5,135.46 million Nov 2012 USD -1,585 million Nov 2012 USD -209 million Mar 2012 P 5,171,689 million Dec 2012

8. Interest Rates 4/

3.6 % Jan 2013 P155,308 million Nov 2012 P 5,381 billion Nov 2012

9. National Government Revenues 10. National government outstanding debt 11. Peso per US $ 5/

P 40.67 Feb 2013

12. Stocks Composite Index 6/

6,242.7 Jan 2013

13. Consumer Price Index 2006=100

132.4 Feb 2013

14. Headline Inflation Rate 2006=100

3.4 Feb 2013

15. Core Inflation Rate 2006=100

3.8 Feb 2013

16. Visitor Arrivals

352,438 Nov 2012

17. Underemployment Rate 7/

20.9% Jan 2013

18. Unemployment Rate 7/

7.1% Jan 2013

MONTHLY AVERAGE EXCHANGE RATE (January 2012-February 2013) Month Average December November October September August July June May April March February January

2013

2012

2011

40.67 40.73

42.23 41.01 41.12 41.45 41.75 42.04 41.91 42.78 42.85 42.70 42.86 42.66 43.62

43.31 43.64 43.27 43.45 43.02 42.42 42.81 43.37 43.13 43.24 43.52 43.70 44.17

It figures

P

UTTING the Mindanao Power agenda on top of its pursuits, the association of Mindanao Rural Electric Cooperatives Inc. (aMRECo) is convening key stakeholders of the island›s power sector to push for immediate and long-term strategies that will address the region’s power issues. Slated from May 27 to 28 in Cagayan de oro City, the 2nd Mindanao Congress of the advocates for Renewable Energy and Rural Electrification and Development (MinCaRED), will serve as a platform for discussion and integrated of actions to push for accelerated renewable energy deployment in Mindanao. “With the theme Mainstreaming the Mindanao Power agenda, the congress will further highlight collaborative mechanisms that can be undertaken to ensure aggressive promotion of renewable energy projects, and the effective delivery of sufficient power supply across the island,” said Luwalhati antonino, Chair of the Mindanao Development authority (MinDa). She explained that among the major gains of the 1st MinCaRED held in January last year, was bringing to national attention the need to address the Mindanao power situation so that immediate and long term measures can be hammered out jointly by the government and the private sector. MinCaRED participants in-

clude representatives from the local government units, which include local chief executives and legislators, representatives from non-government organizations, academe, electric cooperative constituencies, media, private sector, and business leaders as well as other power industry stakeholders. “as we look ahead to the end of this power supply shortfall in the next two to three years, we still face the challenge of balancing the desired energy mix in Mindanao,” added antonino. MinDa, which chairs the Mindanao Power Monitoring Committee (MPMC) announced that while there are already committed power projects that are expected to generate new capacities from 2016 to 2018, majority of these are fossil fuel-based power plants. Co-chaired by Department of Energy, MPMC is composed of aMRECo, the Energy Regulatory Commission, National Electrification administration, National Power Corporation, Power Sector assets and Liabilities Management Corporation, Mindanao Electric Power alliance, National Transmission Corporation, and the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines. “We are looking into the viability of investments in renewable energy projects, specifically small hydro and biomass generation to sustain Mindanao’s ideal energy mix of 50 percent renewable energy and 50 percent fuel-based plants in the

future,” explained antonino. Currently, Mindanao is enjoying a 60-40 energy mix in favor of renewable energy largely on account of it’s agus-Pulangi hydro complex, geothermal plants, several small hydro, biomass and the country’s only solar plant. The 40 percent capacity is supplied by fossil fuel-based power plants, particularly coal and diesel. But by 2016, when committed power projects, which are mostly coal come online, MinDa expects reversal of energy mix. antonino added that in or-

der to achieve the desired energy mix, MinDa is currently working with the Department of Energy and USaID’s CEnergy in conducting an energy resources assessment for small hydro and biomass energy projects. The study will help determine the most suitable areas for these power projects. a one-stop-shop processing and facilitation center specific for renewable energy projects is also being worked out to fast track the approval and implementation of these projects in Mindanao.

RGaNIC black rice from Region 12 has found its way to the markets of Dubai in the United arab Emir-

ates and Hong Kong, officials said. The Don Bosco Multi-Purpose Cooperative, based in

M’lang, North Cotabato, produced the premium colored rice shipped abroad with the help of the Department of agriculture

(Da). The first shipment to Dubai involving 15 metric tons took place last May 6 and the second batch of three MT was shipped out on May 15, a statement from the Da regional office here said. Da assistant Secretary Dante Delima led the send off of the Hong Kong shipment—involving organic black, red and brown rice--- at the Tefasco Wharf in Panacan, Davao City. Delima, concurrently the National Rice Program director, said the exportation of premium organic rice “is a milestone achievement for the country since after 40 long years, the country is now again competing with other exporting countries.” “Since the country cannot compete with exportation of rice by volume, we can compete by exporting premium rice that only selected countries can produce because of certain agri-climatic condition that the crop requires,” Delima said. [Bong S. Sarmiento/MindaNews]

by the numbers

For the first three months of 2013, PHL’s merchandise exports only reached

$12.1 billion or a decrease of 6.2 percent from

$12.9 billion recorded in the same period in 2012. Source: NEDA

Organic black rice hits foreign shores o

BPI AGRIBUSINESS SOLUTIONS. Bank of the Philippine Islands’ Perlina I. Padilla, assistant vice president (ext. left), Reymundo S.L. Castro, senior vice president (2nd from left), Alfonso L. Salcedo Jr., executive vice president (center), and Andrew J. Bateson, Genus PIC

P148.99B Revenue collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) in April 2013. This amount is P32.77 billion, or 28.20%, more than the revenue collected in April 2012. This is also P6.33 billion, or 4.43%, more than the P142.66 billion goal set for the month.

Asia business development director (2nd from right), and Vincent Raphael M. Borromeo, PIC Philippines, Inc.general manager, flash thumbs up during the launching of BPI Agribusiness Solutions at Seda hotel in J.P. Laurel Avenue, Davao City on Friday. Lean Daval Jr.

P1.5B Amount the Department of Tourism (DOT) allocated to finance tourism infrastructure projects in the Davao region. Tourism Secretary Ramon Jimenez Jr. said that among the projects to be funded is the improvement of the roads connecting the foot of Mt. Apo in Davao del Sur to Davao City.

$274M The Philippines’ balance of payments (BOP) surplus in April 2013, reversing a deficit last year and bringing the year-to-date tally closer to the $3-billion forecast for the year by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).


7 One more week of beach weather, Pagasa says NATION/WORLD

EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

D

o you still want to go on a summer vacation? You still have at least a week to take advantage of the last few days in the dry season, state weather bureau Pagasa said. Most parts of the country are still experiencing the summer heat even as the monsoon prevailing in Northern Luzon is shifting towards Habagat, state weather forecaster Jun Galang noted. “Pwede pa kayong mag-bakasyon bago mag-June. Di naman masasayang kung gusto ninyo pang humabol sa Boracay o Palawan,” Galang said. other popular destinations in Southern Luzon, visayas, and Mindanao are also set to experience the same beach-friendly weather. Tourists have however been warned against planning trips to provinces in North Luzon, which he said have started to experience rains. “actually, we are already in the rainy season. Hanging Habagat (Southwest monsoon) is already prevailing in the West Philippine

This file photo shows boats on a beach near Puerto Princesa, on the western Philippine island of Palawan.

Sea,” Galang explained. “In fact, maulan na sa Northern Luzon but that is an effect of the tail end of cold front,” he added. a low pressure area in Taiwan has been blocking the rain-causing monsoon from entering the country in the

last few days, however. Weather conditions in the country still fail to meet the weather bureau’s criteria before they can declare that rainy season is officially here. The amount of rain the country has been experiencing based on

records from Pagas satellite stations is insufficient for the weather bureau to call the end of summer. “Hindi pa natin name-meet yung criteria na 5 out 8 stations in Western region to have at least 25 mm or more amount of rains in

5 days,” Galang said. “Maayos pa ang panahon kaya kailangan sulitin,” he said. The weather forecaster said good weather condition may prevail before June starts or until another LPa or tropical cyclone develops in the Pacific ocean

east of the Philippines. This, he explained, would pull the Southwest monsoon in the West Philippine Sea to take effect in the whole country. Last year, Pagasa officially declared rainy season in the last week of May.[Yahoo!]

ONE NETWORK BANK, INC. (A RURAL BANK) Balance Sheet

As of March 31, 2013 (Head Office and Branches) Account Description ASSETS

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Amount

Cash and Cash Items P 749,689,070.37 Due from Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas 373,304,283.62 Due from Other Banks 807,606,550.61 Financial Assets at Fair Value through Profit or Loss 0.00 Available-for-Sale Financial Assets - Net 1,802,139,846.34 Held-to-Maturity (HTM) Financial Assets - Net 313,545.35 Unquoted Debt Securities Classified as Loans - Net 0.00 Investments in Non-Marketable Equity Security - Net 0.00 Loans and Receivables - Net 14,930,483,302.02 Other Financial Assets 507,479,244.69 Equity Investment in Subsidiaries, Associates and Joint Ventures - Net 6,448,462.30 Bank Premises, Furniture, Fixture and Equipment - Net 1,130,221,825.09 Real and Other Properties Acquired - Net 19,548,261.59 Non-Current Assets Held for Sale 0.00 Other Assets - Net 443,124,564.59 Net Due from Head Office/Branches/Agencies, if any (Philippine branch of a foreign bank) 0.00 TOTAL ASSETS

Gross total loan portfolio (TLP) Specific allowance for credit losses on the TLP Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) a. Gross NPLs b. Ratio of gross NPLs to gross TLP (%) c. Net NPLs d. Ratio of Net NPLs to gross TLP (%)

P 15,559,979,150.99 477,232,493.20 310,509,210.48 2% 2,040,192.27 0.00

We, Chief Operating Officer and President of the above-mentioned bank do solemly swear that all matters set forth in the above Balance Sheet are true and correct to the best of our knowledge and belief.

(SGD.) ROMULO C. GUERRERO Chief Operating Officer

(SGD.) ALEX V. BUENAVENTURA President

P 20,770,358,956.57

SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN to before me this 18th day of APRIL 2013 at DAVAO CITY, affiant exhibiting to me their Driver’s License No. L02-81-02-0440 and L06-71-010069.

LIABILITIES Financial Liabilities Designated at Fair Value through Profit or Loss Deposit Liabilities Due to Other Banks Bills Payable Bonds Payable - Net Unsecured Subordinated Debt - Net Redeemable Preferred Shares Special Time Deposit Due to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Other Financial Liabilities Other Liabilities Due to Head Office/Branches/Agencies (Philippine branch of a foreign bank)

P

0.00 15,229,111,611.86 0.00 1,904,600,000.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 143,044,115.15 234,401,027.25 0.00

TOTAL LIABILITIES

P

17,511,156,754.26

TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

P

3,259,202,202.31

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

P 20,770,358,956.57

TOTAL CONTINGENT ACCOUNTS

P

43,536,798.69

Doc. No. 337 Page No. 68 Book No. XXIV Series No. 2013

ATTY. JOSE M. BALINGIT, JR. Notary Public for Davao City Serial No. 001-2012 until December 31, 2013 PTR No. 1326504-01/03/2013-Davao City IBP No. 04438 - Life Time - Roll of Attorney’s No. 36658 MCLE Complinace No. IV-0003558 One Network Bank, Inc. (A Rural Bank)

ONE NETWORK BANK A Rural Bank

www.onenetworkbank.com.ph


8 VANTAGE POINTS

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

EDITORIAL

Leave fiction to Asiong Salonga

M

aNILa, this country’s capital, is referred to as “gates of hell” in the book “Inferno” -- the latest work of Dan Brown, the same author of “The Davinci Code.” In the new Dan Brown novel, Manila is criticized for its “six-hour traffic jams,” “suffocating pollution,” and “horrifying sex trade.” We are not aware if Brown himself had set foot in Manila long enough to make him an authority on its traffic jams (“six” hours long, he says), or the extent of its “suffocating pollution” (how did he manage to survive?), or its “horrifying sex trade” (he must have been in the thick of the action) to say that with conviction. But one thing’s sure, Brown’s book is a crazy mix of fiction and reality. Brown’s novel is one drawn from the depths of his dark imagination and penned into a story that he wants readers to believe depicts reality. In Brown’s fictional world, the one thing wicked is that he used an existing city to refer to as gates of hell. If the Davinci Code was criticized by book reviews and Theologians as nothing but a sloppy research filled with lies and passed off as gospel truth, this new

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Brown novel is no different. However, Brown’s hitting a sensitive cord in the societal nerve of the Filipino people, especially the Manilenyos, could even spell more cash for the notorious author. It spells Ka-ching! Ka-ching!. Reason, one is apt to would rush to the nearest bookstore to find out what he said in his book. That’s the curiosity effect. Don’t expect Brown to apologize or edit his book. at the back of his mind, this is the kind of reaction that was the object of his book. Now, we could all be taken for a ride in this fiction and fact mix-up. The better way is not to react, but to act. The government would be better off to do away with the traffic jams, the stinking pollution and the horrifying sex trade and make Manila more appealing because, let’s admit it, it may not be the gates to hell but neither is Manila the stairway to heaven. In Brown’s book, it may be hellish but worry not. Fiction-fact images can be dealt with fiction-fact solutions. Remember, the incoming mayor of Manila is ‘asiong Salonga’. Let him deal with Brown in time.

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EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

Indicators of economic health

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HE BUSINESS SECToR IS GETTING ENCoURaGING SIGNaLS – What a difference three years can make. The Philippines is now the association of Southeast Nations’ (aSEaN) second fastest-growing economy under the leadership of President Benigno aquino III. Just about every private and independent economists and financial experts were predicting annual Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of 6 to 7% in 2013, the same robust performance the country has been pulling off since President PNoy assumed the presidency. Even when its neighboring regional economies devalued their currencies during the past months, the conventional wisdom was that the Philippines would not be much affected because of its strong economic fundamentals and ample foreign currency reserves. The consensus estimate for growth this year risen to 6.6% - and perhaps maybe even higher next year. What had changed actually are perceptions, according to the government’s financial research specialists. Investors notably the big foreign companies are now trusting of the country’s growth story. The peso is being closely watched after its remarkable increase against the US dollar and other foreign currencies. Meanwhile the stock market escalated to its highest points in recent weeks and investment grade and credit ratings improve significantly. our present leaders, captains of trade and industry and economic think-tanks know full well that a strong currency and bullish stock market are basically signs of a bet-

ter, brighter economic future. The business sector is getting encouraging signals and the good news keeps on coming. That’s why a growing number of economists are declaring that it’s about time for modest but relevant creative undertakings. The idea somewhat prodded government financial managers and economic experts to make compliant statements that growth will never be curtailed and that most if not all of the ambitious property, infrastructure, tourism and agricultural development projects will go ahead as planned. Indeed, they have even repeatedly talked of accelerating growth that makes economists take a positive view of the country’s ability to reform and avoid instability – if the economy grows by more than 7%. In such situation continued high growth could absorb a lot of jobless people, which would allow reforms to carry on. But remember, too, that some private and independent economists are more pessimistic still, warning about the so-called “inclusive and jobless growth” citing a situation where the country has been enjoying an impressive growth rate but “the much-vaunted economic gains have not trickled down to the masses.” Some anti-administration candidates even took advantage of

that observation and magnified the issue during the campaign sorties to boost their flagging candidacies. Government people dismissed the allegation saying such notions of “inclusive and jobless growth” are baseless and unfounded. Maybe, but the issues on unemployment and abject poverty have some basis according to reports provided by various groups conducting study and research about the country’s current unemployment and poverty situation. Within this climate, small but increasingly vocal groups of keen observers insist that the real solution to the nation’s poverty situation is not about a strong currency, bullish stock market, improved credit ratings and investment grade, but job generation and poverty alleviation programs. To the extent that it dampen the public’s expectations of higher unemployment rate and, generates measures to improve the people’s standard of living, a wellplanned job generation and poverty alleviation programs are in order. Matching words with concrete actions on the part of the government and its line agencies means doing something about the country’s socio-economic glitches. The point seems obvious, but it can be done. Effective and resolute actions are indicators of economic health. Financial soundness, growth in industry and trade, job creation and poverty alleviation – these are equally important pointers to how an economy is doing. That’s a sobering reality – even for the proudest and self-assured bureaucrats.

Are we really the Boss or are they pulling our leg?

M

aKE democracy the partner of development. People-power in bloom will lead Philippine society closer to attaining the ideal of a government of the people, by the people and for the people. Democracy with a dynamic, productive mode will more surely promote human development and a strong the base for what can be rightly claimed as a Strong Republic. There will be direct democracy and a parliamentary government in the barangay as ordained by law. as the primary level of our political system, the barangay will function properly as a government, a public corporation, and an economy—exemplifying a small republic from which the Philippine Republic draws its strength, one that creates its own prosperity and makes the state policy of autonomy a reality.

WORM’S EYEVIEW By Manny ValdehueSa

(Conclusion) Finally, if the people are adequately informed of their essential role and powers as sovereign citizens, Filipinos will not have to reach so high up the political ladder to address their concerns; They have but to convene the Barangay assembly, which is their parliament and of which they are members (Sec 397-398) and through it transform the grassroots into the true base of People Power in the House of Democracy that President Cory built from the wreck of Dictatorship. only then can we claim confidently that barangays are the durable foundation of our sovereign state, the

formidable base of a Strong Republic. Mr. President: These items on the unfinished agenda of EDSa and of your Excellency’s mother, President Cory, beloved heroine of Filipinos everywhere, remain pending. She could only dream about them during her time. It now remains for you to make them real in the land which gave birth to People Power. Please abolish that ignominious Pork Barrel now. Let us admit that our society still is ill-prepared to fully secure the public trust against abuse, irresponsibility and/or reckless thievery! (Mindaviews is the opinion section of MindaNews. Manny valdehuesa is the president and national convenor of Gising Barangay Movement Inc. He can be reached at valdehuesa@gmail.com )

VANTAGE POINTS

9

Gates of hell

W

HEN novelist Dan Brown published his “The Da vinci Code” some sectors of the Catholic Church wanted him crucified for b l a s p h e my. The Church mobilized hundreds of faithful in rallies against the book which contains unflattering historical facts about the roots of Christianity and its early leaders, including the supposed first pope, Saint Peter. But I doubt if the majority of those who heeded the Church’s call to condemn Brown as a heretic, had read the controversial novel, in the same manner that I doubt if the lay people who toed the Church’s line on the equally controversial Reproductive Health Law had ever read the law in its entirety so as to render an informed judgment. Earlier this month, Brown’s latest opus, Inferno, a story inspired by certain passages in Dante alighieri’s poem “The Divine Comedy” hit bookshelves around the world. Interestingly, the novel tackles the moral question of how best to deal with an ever growing population vis-à-vis the world’s limited carrying capacity. The plot pits a brilliant genetic engineer named Dr. Bertrand Zobrist against the chief of the World Health organization, Dr. Elizabeth Sinskey. Between Zobrist and Sinskey stand art professor Robert Langdon and Zobrist’s disciple Dr. Sienna Brooks. However, in contrast to Langdon’s predictable role as the puzzle solver, Brooks’ real standpoint on Zobrist’s solution to the population question remains unknown until the climax unfolds. Brooks is a troubled individual, who as a child harbored feelings of being unaccepted despite possessing a superior intelligence. The search for meaning, the books narrates, brings her to Manila for a humanitarian mission. Her unpleasant experience in the Philippine capital, however, including being sexually assaulted by three men, makes her exclaim that she has gone through the “gates of hell.” That sounds serious, an unsavory description of the metropolis that would have made me protest as a Filipino. But “Inferno” is just fiction, I reminded myself and went on reading. In fact, other cities in other countries have received worse descriptions either in works of fiction or in factual narratives. Furthermore, readers, Filipinos in particular, should interpret the unsavory phrase, gates of hell, as an allegorical description of the kind of experience of a key character in the story, Brooks. We should acknowledge that a person’s experience defines his or her perception of a place, time or event. arguably, that’s how Brown intended it to be. Perceptions are realities. There is no way one can impose on anybody how he or she should perceive the world or a part of it. This is so in real life. This is much more so in works of fiction. More importantly, Brown’s description of Manila can only be appreciated if one reads it in the context of the conflict created by the plot. a tree should not be mistaken for the forest. This is perhaps why Dante chose to present his interpretation of the afterlife in one single – forgive the term – hell of a classic. Writing it piecemeal would have diminished the connectedness of the three possible destinations of human souls after death as Church teachings tell us. But Chairman Francis Tolentino of the Metro Manila Development authority thought otherwise. He considered the description inaccurate and even asked Brown to call Manila the “portal to heaven.” I won’t argue with that, although I must say that I feel more secure in Mindanao’s rebel-infested areas than in the metropolis. [Mindaviews isthe opinion section of MindaNews. H. Marcos C. Mordeno can be reached at hmcmordeno@gmail.com]


10 NEWS

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

PPI to re-examine media, award best regional papers

o

N its 49th year and 17th annual conference, the Philippine Press Institute also known as the national association of newspapers, will re-examine the journalism practice in the country and assess how newspapers are surviving in the digital age in this year’s National Press Forum (NPF) “Watching the Watchdog: Re-examining ourselves” on June 13 and 14 at the New World Hotel in Makati. The annual event highly anticipated by PPI members from Luzon, visayas, Mindanao and the NCR will gather publishers and editors who will also discuss other issues and concerns related to sustainability and even threats that make it even more difficult for community newspapers and journalists to survive. also invited to attend are members of the diplomatic community, journalism and communication students and educators, business groups, representatives from the civil society organizations, media executives and government officials.

“We need to be critical of ourselves too,” says Malaya publisher and PPI chairman amado ‘Jake’ Macasaet during the final meeting of the PPI Board first quarter of the year. “There are those who corrupt and those who are being corrupted.” He said the theme goes beyond ethics but more importantly, touches on the survival of newspapers amidst the proliferation of online media and other competitors. Media critic and PPI vice-chairman vergel Santos who will do the introduction to set the tone of the conference, said that proficiency should also be the focus. “Not only because the quality of professional practice in every aspect is poor, but also because technology has opened the practice to people altogether untrained for it, not to mention clueless about it,” he said. Both seasoned newspapermen and long-time PPI trustees agreed that professional values should be revisited and the quality of their observance as well the extent of their non-observance re-assessed.

vision are among the top transactions using electronic payments. Likewise, mobile phone e-loading top ups and e-wallet loading are also among top e-payment transactions which have found their way into the lifestyle of Dabawenyos. Raymund Jude aguilar, president of Electronic Commerce Payments Inc. (ECPay), said 90 percent of the electronic transactions of ECPay in Davao City are power bill payments. ECPay, according to aguilar, was designed to make payments and collections efficient and convenient to both merchants and customers alike. Developed in 2001, the ECPay multi platform payment infrastructure operates as a secure e-warehouse and e-payments data center for prepaid products, bills payments, airline ticket payments, online shopping transaction payments, e-wallet, fund transfers, and domestic remittance. “It enables merchants and retain outlets to offer accurate, secure and timely payment services to their customers while providing merchant

clients with real time electronic reconciliation, web-based reporting and system management,” aguilar said. Despite the low acceptance for the revolutionary card economy, Regis said NCCC

CRASHED. Aircraft mechanics examine an Agcat plane, which will be used for agricultural spraying, crashed shortly after takeoff at Francisco Bangoy International Airport in Davao City Friday morning. Lean Daval Jr.

Cash versus card.. FFROM 1

is

still bent on venturing the unt rave l e d waters. For starters, the NCCC Mall will be introducing online shopping on limited product lines. “We will be moving into online shopping but on selected products only,” Regis said. online shopping in the Philippines has been noted to begin to flourish. among the noted online shopping gateway is Lazada Philippines which is now the country’s leading one-stop online shop after only a year of operations.

“We have studied the growth and acceptance of online shopping and we feel it’s time to venture into the market,” said Regis. However, Regis cautioned some products are better off sold on the rack where customers are more at home with “touch and feel” shopping. “For example, when buying furniture’s or beds, people would prefer that they get a feel before buying,” he explained. online shopping may be good for some items, Regis said, but they still wish people would come to the mall to shop the old-school way. NCCC Mall has an average daily foot traffic of 50,000 which is a mere one-third of the average unique visits Lazada has online. a market research revealed that five out of six consumers who use the internet to research a specific product they want actually buy the product offline. This means they are basically using the internet only as a research tool and do not complete the online experience, which is the actual sale. “It’s a matter of selling the idea to people,” Regis said.

12 killed as soldiers clash with Abu Sayyaf

a

T least 12 people were killed, including seven Marines and five Abu Sayyaf bandits, while nine other soldiers were wounded in a fierce firefight at a remote village in Patikul town in Sulu Saturday morning, a military spokesman said. armed Forces spokesman Brig. Gen. Domingo Tutaan said the soldiers from the 2nd Marine Brigade were on tracking operations when they caught up with a large group of abu Sayyaf terrorists at about 6:45 a.m. in Tugas village. The firefight had lasted for over an hour before the bandits fled, Tutaan said, adding that pursuit operations are ongoing. “The soldiers were on tracking operations against those involved in recent kidnapping incidents in Sulu, when the firefight in Barangay Tugas occurred…. It was a long firefight. Unfortunate-

ly, seven personnel were killed in action and nine were slightly wounded,” said Tutaan. “on the side of the abu Sayyaf, five were reported killed and some were wounded based on reports I got. The pursuit operations are ongoing right now… as we speak, the fighting has stopped and we are on pursuit operations,” he added. Tutaan was uncertain as to the number of the bandits the soldiers encountered, but he said “it was a large group,” which the military believed responsible for recent Sulu kidnapping incidents, in which a wife of a Marine soldier was among the victims. But he said the bloody clash on Saturday does not mean the abu Sayyaf is still a force to contend with. “Timing is a big factor…. I think it was a frontal encounter.”

Latest military estimate placed the strength of the abu Sayyaf to about 300, mostly based in Sulu and in Basilan. The group is behind a number of high-profile attacks, including bombings and kidnappings in Sulu. Moreover, Tutaan said aFP Western Mindanao Command chief Lt. Gen. Rey ardo and 2nd Marine Brigade commander Col. Jose Johnriel Cenabre are on top of the ongoing security operations against the group. Founded using seed money from the al Qaeda international terrorist network in the 1990s, the abu Sayyaf is blamed for the worst terror attacks in the country, including the firebombing of a ferry in Manila Bay and abductions of foreign tourists. The group is on the US government’s list of socalled foreign terrorist organizations.

atillo added that the adoption of the program is in response to the need to improve the competitiveness of our country’s graduates, hence the demand for more teachers. “The DepEd has approved 61,510 items for public school teachers in elementary and secondary level all over the country for this

year,” atillo said, adding that the Philippines usually needed only 10,000 teachers before the full implementation of the K+12 program. “You just can’t imagine how helpful this is to unemployed teachers in our region, thatis why we’re very excited that this year we will be able to close the gap of teacher scarcity,” he

said. Teacher vacancies can be filled with deployment from the central office, local school board (LSB) support and continuous hiring by DepEd offices all over the region. “We will not be having problems in 20132014 in terms of the number of teachers,” he said.

2,923 public school.. FFROM 2


EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

MOTORING 11

Now rolling, the new Porsche Cayman I

N an exclusive event attended by Porsche owners and guests held in alabang, the new Porsche Cayman was unveiled during its official launching in the Philippines last May 18, 2013. The third generation of the Cayman has b e e n com-

pletely redeveloped. It is lower and longer, lighter and faster, more efficient and more powerful than ever. a longer wheel-base, wider track and larg-

er wheels enhance the driving performance of the mid-engine sports car to a level without equal in its competitive class. The new

two-seater is – after the 911 Carrera and Boxster – the third sports car model line from Porsche to feature in-

novative light-

weight body design. The new Cayman is up to 30 kg lighter, depending on the specific model and equipment,

developed Burmester sound system. another new feature for the Cayman is the keyless Entry &

and it consumes up to 15 per cent less fuel per 100 km than the previous model – despite higher

engine and driving performance. The new generation of the two-seat mid-engine sports car is debuting in two classic Porsche versions: the Cayman and the Cayman S. The base model is powered by a 2.7-liter flat six-cylinder engine with 275 hp (202 kW). It accelerates from zero to 100 km/h in 5.4 seconds, depending on the equipment, and reaches a top speed of 266 km/h. Its NEDC fuel consumption lies between 12.20km/liter and 12.98 km/ liter, depending on the selected transmission. The 3.4-liter engine of the Cayman S produces 325 hp (239 kW); the best possible ac-celeration from a standstill to 100 km/h is 4.7 seconds with appropriate features. The Cayman S can reach a top speed of 283 km/h, and its NEDC fuel consumption value lies between 11.36 km/liter and 12.5 km/liter, depending on the selected transmission. Both sport coupés are equipped with standard manual six-speed transmission. The seven-speed Porsche Doppelkupplungsgetriebe (PDK) can be delivered as an option; it enables faster acceleration and better fuel economy. Porsche is also upgrading the Cayman with new optional features. For example, the sport coupé is now available with adaptive Cruise Control (aCC) for the first time, which controls the distance to the car ahead in traffic and vehicle speed, as well as a specially

Drive s y s t e m , which is available as an option. Design: new proportions, prominent lines The new Cayman is more distinctive than ever. Its proportions are new, and yet it is clearly a Porsche sport coupé; an extended wheelbase with shorter overhangs and 18- and 19-inch diameter wheels with larger rolling circumference are identifying visual characteristics of the car s more enhanced driving performance. Its styling is marked by precise lines and razor-sharp sculpted edges. They emphasise the car s low, extended silhouette with the windscreen shifted forward and the roof line that reaches far back. Especially expressive and characteristic are the dynamic recesses in the doors, which guide induction air into the distinctive air scoops on the rear side panels and then di-rectly to the engine. This offers the most prominent visualisation of the concept of a mid-engine car. From the front end, the new Cayman is marked by its dominant cooling air inlets, which increase in size towards the sides of the car. Just as unique to the new generation of the sport coupé are the large, low rear lid made of aluminium and the rear section with its wrap-around edges. Mounted directly to the rear lid is the thin blade of the rear spoiler, which in contrast to that of the Boxster is higher and deploys at a steeper angle. The overall appearance of the Cayman is more independent than before, and it is well-differentiated from the previous model.


12 CLASSIFIEDS ADS

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDavao Gensan Partners

EDGEDAVAO

Health and Wellness

Tel No. (083) 553-2211 / (083) 877-0019 / (083) 878-0308

NOTICE OF LOSS NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC In Compliancewith the publication requirement and pursuant to oCRG Memorandum Circular No. 2013-1 Guidelines in the Implementation of the administrative order No. 1 Series of 2012 (IRR on R.a. 10172),Notice is hereby served to the public that aNaBELLE BULaC vISTaL has filed with this office, a Petition for Correction of Entry in Sex from “MaLE to “FEMaLE” IN THE Certificate of Live Birth of aNNaBELLE BULaC vISTaL at Panabo, Davao and whose papernts are ELDEFoNSo C. vISTaL & LoLITa P. BULaC. any person adversely affected by said petition may file his written opposition with this office not later than June 7, 2013. (SGD)CONCHITA L. ESPINOSA City Civil Registrar Panabo City 5/27/6/3

Notice is hereby given by LoYoLa PLaNS CoNSoLIDaTED INC. that CERTIFICaTE oF FULL PaYMENT No.(s) 1002763 under LoYoLa PLaN Contract No.(s) 298379-0/ NNN710769412 issued to Lacuesta, oscar L. was lost. any transaction entered into shall be null and void. 5/13,20,27

Realty FOR SALE:

1) 1-hectare commercial lot at P10,000/sq m, along National Highway, facing east, beside NCCC Panacan, Davao City. 2) 17,940sq m commercial lot at P2,500/sq m, along Matina Diversion Road. 3) 3,831 sq m lot along Matina Diversion Road. 4) 41,408 sq m commercial/ industrial lot at P800/sq m along the National Highway, Bunawan. 5) 7,056 sq m at P1,200/sq m commercial/residential lot along Indangan Road, Buhangin District. 6) 27,411 sq m commercial/ industrial lot along the National Highway in Bincungan, Tagum City. 7) 116.15 to 245.92 sq meters , at P5.5M to P12.3M commercial/ office condo units in Bajada, Davao City. 8) 699 to 1,117 sq m at P4,100/sq m commercial lots at Josefina Town Center, along the National Highway, Dumoy, Toril. 9) Ready-for-Occupancy Residential Properties: 4BR/3T&B in a 240 sq m lot with 177.31sqm floor area (2-storey) at P4.8M in an exclusive beachfront community in Dumoy, Toril.; 3BR 2-storey in a 71.25 sq m 2-storey in a 143sq m lot in an exclusive flower village in Maa, Davao City; 180 sq m lots with 71.25sqm to 126.42 sq m floor areas, priced at P3.751M to P5.773M in an exclusive mountain resort community along Matina, Diversion Road. 10) 1BR/2BR residential condo units located in Bolton, Maa, Obrero, Davao City. 11) FOR ASSUME (RUSH): 1BR res’l condo unit in Palmetto, Maa. P600K negotiable. Note: Items 1-9 can be paid in cash, in-house or bank financing. If interested, please call Jay (PRC REB Lic. 8237) at 0922-851-5337 (Sun), 0908-883-8832 (Smart) or send email to propertiesindavao@yahoo.com.

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EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

CLASSIFIEDS ADS 13


14 COMMUNITY SENSE

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

KGCP, students join hands in ‘growing trees’ M

ining firm Kingking Copper-Gold Project (KCGP) and students of the Nestor Fausta Memorial College, Inc. (NFMCI) partnered in a tree-planting activity in Pantukan, Compostela valley last May 22. Placing more importance on “growing trees rather than planting”, KCGP and NFMCI signed a memorandum of agreement and agreed to do more activities in the future that would sustain the growth of the planted trees. The activity started with a short program which was attended by Brgy Capt and newly-elected Pantukan may-

or Roberto “ondoy” Yugo of Brgy Kingking; Rogelio Hermo, oIC- CENRo-Maco; Petronilo Cancino, operations Manager – KCGP; Debbie Ruth Yasay, Environment and Permitting Manager – KCGP; Jonathan Baňez, Community Relations and Development Unit Head – KCGP; Lenna Mae Leopoldo, Environmental Scientist – KCGP; and Philip Noel Garrote, Environmental Management and Monitoring Specialist. Mayor-elect Yugo appreciated the effort of the school and the prompt response of KCGP for the said climate-change-derailing activity. Hermo on his part as-

sociated the celebration of ocean Month (May) with the tree planting activity. He pointed out to the student-participants that whatever we do in our lands will generally affect our oceans and the creatures living under, as the water flowing from uplands will definitely reach our seas. Cancino thanked the school administration and its students for making KCGP their partner. He said that the company is committed to support environment protection programs and will never get tired of doing it. He also thanked the opportunity of sharing to the young generation

the proper technology in planting. He emphasized that the company targets not just planting but on how to grow and sustain trees. That it is not on how many trees you plant but on how many trees you grow. Joed James Daguman, an alumnus of NFMCI, who also participated in the activity, praised KCGP’s involvement in preserving and protecting the environment and the knowledge they share to stakeholders in areas where they would operate. He was taught on the planting site the proper way of handling the seedlings and on how to plant it. [BoT]

EDGEDAVAO

REPUBLIC oF THE PHILIPPINES REGIoNaL TRIaL CoURT 11TH JUDICIaL REGIoN oFFICE oF THE CLERK oF CoURT-SHERIFF Davao CITY

HOME DEVELOPMENT MUTUAL FUND OR PAG-IBIG FUND, Mortgagee -versus-

EJF-REM CaSE No. 14,186-13

JAMES VELARDE ROM married to TESSIE CADUNGOG ROM, Mortgagor/s.

x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x NOTICE OF EXTRA-JUDICIAL SALE

Upon extra-judicial petition for foreclosure and sale under act 3135, as amended, filed by the mortgagee Home Development Mutual Fund or Pag-ibig Fund against the mortgagor/s JaMES vELaRDE RoM married to TESSIE CaDUNGoG RoM, of legal age, with residence and postal address at LoT 1 , BLK. 3 , Rosalina village 3 Dumoy Toril , Davao City to satisfy the mortgage indebtedness which as of Jan 3, 2013 amounts to ( P 239,438.05) Philippine Currency, inclusive of interest, penalty charges, as of January 3, 2013 plus attorney’s fees equivalent to TEN ( 10%) of the total indebtedness plus other legal expenses incident of foreclosure and sale; the undersigned Sheriff Iv of the Regional Trial Court, Davao City, will sell at public auction on June 21 , 2013 at 10:00 a.M. or soon thereafter, at the main entrance of Hall of Justice, Ecoland,Davao City to the highest bidder for Cash or MaNaGER’S CHECK and in Philippine Currency, the following real property together with all the improvements thereon, to wit: Transfer Certificate of Title No. T- 2700287 “ a parcel of land of the consolidation-subdivision project (Lot 1, Blk. 3, of the cons-subd. Pcs-112402-001850 xxx) situated in the City of Davao, Island of Mindanao.xxx Containing an area of oNE HUNDRED TWENTY THREE (123) SQUaRE METERS, more or less” all sealed bids must be submitted to the undersigned on the above-stated time and date.

In the event the public auction should not take place on the said date,it shall be held on JuLY 19, 2013 without further notice. Prospective buyers are hereby enjoined to investigate for themselves the titles herein described real property/ies and the encumbrances thereon, if any there be. Davao City, Philippines, May 8, 2013

FoR THE EX-oFFICIo SHERIFF: (SGD.) JULITO J. ANGGOT Sheriff Iv

Noted by:

(SGD) ATTY. EDIPOLO P. SARABIA, JR. Clerk of Court vI & Ex-officio Provincial Sheriff (edge 5/13,20,27)

REPUBLIC oF THE PHILIPPINES REGIoNaL TRIaL CoURT 11TH JUDICIaL REGIoN oFFICE oF THE CLERK oF CoURT-SHERIFF Davao CITY

HOME DEVELOPMENT MUTUAL FUND OR PAG-IBIG FUND, Mortgagee -versus-

EJF-REM CaSE No. 14,222-13

MARLON M. LUMAYAS, married to JESSELYN N. LUMAYAS, Mortgagor/s.

x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x NOTICE OF EXTRA-JUDICIAL SALE

Upon extra-judicial petition for foreclosure and sale under act 3135, as amended, filed by the mortgagee Home Development Mutual Fund or Pag-ibig Fund against the mortgagor/s MaRLoN M. LUMaYaS, married to JESSELYN N. LUMaYaS with postal address at LoT 31 , BLK. 15, DECa HoMES CaBaNTIaN BUHaNGIN , Davao City to satisfy the mortgage indebtedness which as of Jan 4, 2013 amounted to ( P 522,473.37) Philippine Currency, inclusive of interest, penalty charges, plus attorney’s fees equivalent to TEN ( 10%) of the total indebtedness plus other legal expenses incident of foreclosure and sale; the undersigned Sheriff Iv of the Regional Trial Court, Davao City, will sell at public auction on June 28 , 2013 at 10:00 a.M. or soon thereafter, at the main entrance of Hall of Justice, Ecoland,Davao City to the highest bidder for Cash or MaNaGER’S CHECK and in Philippine Currency, the following real property together with all the improvements thereon, to wit: Transfer Certificate of Title No. T- 444300 “a parcel of land (Lot 31, Blk. 15, . Pcs-11002129 xxx) situated in the Barangay of Cabantian, C Davao City, Island of Mindanao.xxx Containing an area of EIGHTY oNE(81) SQUaRE METERS, more or less” all sealed bids must be submitted to the undersigned on the above-stated time and date.

In the event the public auction should not take place on the said date,it shall be held on July 26, 2013 without further notice. Prospective buyers are hereby enjoined to investigate for themselves the titles herein described real property/ies and the encumbrances thereon, if any there be. Davao City, Philippines, May 8, 2013

FoR THE EX-oFFICIo SHERIFF:

Noted by:

(SGD.) ROBERT M. MEDIALDEA Sheriff Iv

(SGD) ATTY. EDIPOLO P. SARABIA, JR. Clerk of Court vI & Ex-officio Provincial Sheriff (edge 5/20,27,6.3)


INdulge!

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

MOVIE REVIEW

Glitz, glamour and gloom Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby

By Jay Rosas irected by Baz Luhrmann, The Great Gatsby is the sixth film adaptation of the seminal novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald about 1920s America and the tragedy that is the American Dream. Sadly, it remains a proof of the difficulty in translating a great piece of literature to the because of its evolution screen. It reaches for from being merely a ragsthe unreachable but to-riches story to more of lands on its feet with conveying the pathos of a dud. It isn’t that it’s this ambition, the pursuer totally bad, some of that dream ending up a of the imaginings tragic figure, the man who work, but it’s a little dreamed too much. The too much ambition, story of Jay Gatsby maysoaked in the throes be similar to that of Don of relentless excess, Draper, the deeply-troulike guzzling a glass bled central figure of Mad of champagne you Men, the hit TV series only realized was about advertising execustale after the con- tives in the 1950s and 60s. tents are emptied Like Gatsby, Don Draper hastily in your gut, is a self-made man. Born leaving a queasy out of poverty, he rose to feeling. the rungs of power quite

D

The American Dream is portrayed in varying representations in film and television, a theme that is made interesting in American popular culture

fast, his authority not measured by wealth but by his influence-wielding character, charisma and yes, ambition. Power and money, even women and

FGLITZ, GLAMOUR AND GLOOM, A4


EDGEDAVAO

A2 INdulge! UP AND ABOUT

Slam dunk backto-school prices GRAB a Lenovo smartphone at low prices and get ahead in school LENOVO Mobile launched its back-to-school promo over the weekend, offering 10 to 20% price drops on selected smartphone units. These amazing price drops will surely give everyone from the academe the opportunity to avail themselves of that most sought-after pocket-size smart gadget which Lenovo Mobile is now offering at a very-affordable cost. Students, teachers of all grade levels from K+12 to college, campus administrative staff, and parents buying for their school-bound kids have four Lenovo smartphone models to choose from suiting to their needs and passion. Now out on sale are Lenovo Mobile’s P700i, S560, K860, and S880 – all tailor-made “for those who do.” The dual-SIM Lenovo P700i, which can get more things done with its longer battery life, is now available for P6, 999 from its original P10,999 price. The P700i, faster and stronger than its predecessor – P700, has a 4-inch capacitive multitouchscreen and Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) operating system (OS) that lets users work wherever and whenever they need to.

Down to P6, 999 from P10, 999, the Lenovo S560 is dubbed as the “sound monster” with its Dolby mobile dual speakers amped up with dual core power. It also runs on Android 4.0 ICS, has a 4-inch touchscreen, and is likewise dual-SIM . For those who want have more fun in their hands, the Lenovo K860 allows users to max up their playtime with its 1.5-gigahertz (GHz) Quad-Core CPU, Android 4.0 OS, and a five-inch HD 720P IPS-LCD full touchscreen. Now for P14,999 from P19,999, a user can do and enjoy so much with the powerful K860 smartphone. With the Lenovo S880’s whopping 5-inch capacitive multitouchscreen, who needs a tablet? The dual-SIM S880, now marked down to P8,999 from P14,999, has a surface area that lets users see more detail with unsurpassed clarity. Running on Android 4.0 ICS with a 1GHz CPU speed processor, this one-of-a-kind mobile device has the performance capability to help turn possibilities into reality. As the start of the school year is just around the corner, it’s now time for campus denizens not just to live out their true passion but to enhance their knowledge via internet as well with just a touch on the screen of a Lenovo Mobile smartphone. Lenovo Mobile’s back-to-school promo is available at all retail outlets nationwide. More information on Lenovo Mobile’s back-to-school promo can be found on lenovomobile. com.ph,facebook.com/lenovomobileph, and twitter: LenovoMobilePH.

GOOD EATS FOR SHARING. Bulgogi Brothers introduces all new barbecue specials that are not only good eating, but are good for sharing. Take a bite of juicy Boneless Beef Ribs that are flavoured with a fruity bulgogi sauce or try our L.A. Style Short Ribs, strips of bone-in beef short ribs marinated in our special bulgogi sauce. Each is served with side dishes on the house. Visit Bulgogi Brothers at the second level of SM Lanang Premier’s Fountain Court facing Park Inn.

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EVENTS

Isuzu promotes a more active lifestyle to Pinoys By Kenneth Irving Ong

The Philippines’ most popular pickup, the Isuzu DMAX LS Limited edition recently held the Davao leg of their 2013 Isuzu Nationwide Mall Tour at SM Lanang Premier. It’s this combination of power, utility, premium equipment and dynamic looks that has made the D-MAX LS highly capable in tackling sporting activities. No wonder that this award-winning vehicle is the perfect training and competition partner to the Isuzu D-MAX Multisport Team and its celebrity member, Matteo Guidicelli. Starting in 2011 as the Isuzu D-MAX Racing Team before being renamed as the Isuzu DMAX Cycling Team, the group has topped competitions in local and regional cycle-racing series. however, more and more leading athletes from various sports disciplines have

Team Isuzu poses in front of the Isuzu D-MAX LE which features sporty stripes. joined its roster, and so the the road with the Isuzu D- models like the Alterra team eventually entered MAX. SUV and the bestselling into multisport events as Through the 2013 Isuzu Crosswind AUV are also well, with additions like Nationwide Mall Tour, featured at the mall disGuidicelli emerging as which started on March plays, giving visitors the among the strongest con- 4 and which will last until opportunity to realize the tenders in numerous com- May 29, IPC is bringing its reasons why Isuzu vehicles petitions. range of family-friendly are popular among famiFor the Davao mall tour, vehicles to popular shop- lies of Overseas Filipino Matteo was game enough ping malls across the coun- Workers, people engaged to entertain the crowds try so that more Filipinos in small to midsize busiwith a couple of songs may check out the latest nesses, and even to those as well as share this very Isuzu offerings. Besides who use them for personal positive experiences on the D-MAX, other Isuzu and recreational pursuits.

Matteo talks about his positive experiences with the Isuzu D-MAX.

Matteo brings in the crowds.

Fans can’t seem to get enough of Matteo.

Team Isuzu.

Taking the wheel of the Isuzu D-MAX LE.


VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

INdulge! A3

ENTERTAINMENT

Jennifer Hudson signs on as American Idol judge!

AMERICAN Idol has nailed down its first alum turned judge: Jennifer Hudson.

Multiple sources confirm exclusively to E! News that the Oscar-winning singer has signed a deal to sit at the judges’ table this fall for season 13. The other two spots are also intended for former Idol contestants: Kelly Clarkson and either Adam Lambert or Clay Aiken. We’re told that Clarkson is also close to signing on. No word yet on whether Lambert or Aiken will fill the final spot, but producers are expected to keep the panel to three members. The “superstar-alum” theme is aimed at reclaiming some of Idol’s lost view-

ership—the series is down about 10 million viewers from two years ago, in part because of the success of The Voice. Fox (smartly) wants to highlight Idol’s upper hand: It’s the only singing competi-

tion to actually manufacture top-selling stars. “It’s Idol alums bringing in the next generation,” says one Fox source of the reasoning behind the casting for season 13. Current judges Nicki Minaj, Mariah Carey, Randy Jackson and Keith Urban will not be returning. Hudson didn’t win the show’s third season but went on to have one of the most high-profile careers, winning an Academy Award in 2006 for Best Supporting Actress for Dreamgirls. She most recently appeared on the second season of NBC’s troubled and now-canceled series Smash. Fox had no comment on Hudson’s casting.

MAY 24, 2013

NOW

SHOWING

1:00 3:40 6:20 9:00

12:20 2:30 4:40 6:50 9:00

11:10 1:55

(PG-13)

EPIC (GP)

12:50 2:40

11:30 2:10

1:15 3:55 6:35 9:00

APARTMENT 143 (R-13)

4:30 6:45 9:00 BROMANCE (PG-13)

11:20 1:45

4:40 6:50 9:00

EPIC (GP)

FAST & FURIOUS 6

STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS (PG-13)

FAST & FURIOUS 6 (PG-13

4:40 6:55 9:00

CARS 2 3D (GP)

4:30 7:30

FAST & FURIOUS 6

THE CALL (R-16)

(PG-13)

STAR TREK INTO THE DARKNESS 3D (PG-13)

Carrie Underwood donates $1 million to Red Cross for Oklahoma tornado relief LAST week’s tornado in Oklahoma hit close to home for Carrie Underwood. The Sooner State native has donated $1 million to the American Red Cross to help with relief efforts. “I have watched the devastation in my home state of Oklahoma over the past several days with great sadness,” Underwood said in a statement. “With the help of my fans who attended my concerts over the past year, we can offer the Red Cross a little extra help in comforting those affected by the recent tornados.” Neal Litvack, chief devel-

opment officer for the Red Cross, said, “The impact of the tornados in Oklahoma and the Midwest was devastating and the road to recovery will be long for many families. Through the generosity of Carrie, the American Red Cross can quickly respond with shelter, food and comfort now, and with lasting help as they move toward recovery.” Par ticularly large checks have also come from Oklahoma City Thunder star Kevin Durant, who pledged $1 million, and funnyman David Spade,

who donated $200,000 to the cause.

Amanda Bynes arrested after allegedly throwing a bong out her apartment window AMANDA ByNES appears to have moved beyond lashing out via Twitter. The 26-year-old starlet was arrested tonight in New york after allegedly throwing a bong out of her Midtown apartment window when police showed up in response to a call about a disorderly person in her building, the NyPD confirms to E! News. She has been booked on charges of reckless endangerment, tampering with evidence and criminal possession of marijuana. Bynes was first taken to Roosevelt Hospital to undergo a psychiatric evaluation before being transported to

a Midtown station for processing. Police tell E! that her building’s doorman called 911 at around 7:42 p.m. to report that Bynes was smoking pot in the lobby. When officers

arrived, Bynes had already gone back to her apartment. They followed and, when she opened the door, saw a bong, which she then allegedly threw out the window. The officers noted smoke and the smell of marijuana in the apartment. We’re told that Bynes is being transferred to Manhattan Central Booking and will likely spend the night there before facing a judge in the morning. Two weeks ago, Bynes pleaded no contest (via her attorney) in Burbank, Calif., to driving with a suspended license and was sentenced to three years’ summary probation. A DUI charge is still pending in Beverly Hills.

BROMANCE Zanjoe Marudo, Christine Reyes PG-13

12:00 | 2:00 | 4:00 | 6:00 | 8:00 | 10:00 LFS

EPIC- 3D Amanda Seyfried , Colin Farrell GP

12:00 | 2:00 | 4:00 | 6:00 | 8:00 | 10:00 LFS

STAR TREK *FAST AND FURIOUS 6 Chris Pine , | *Vin Diesel PG-13

12:00 | 2:30 | * 06:15 | 8:45 LFS

R-16 FAST AND FURIOUS 6 Vin Diesel , Michelle Rodriguez PG-13

12:00 | 2:30 | 5:00 | 7:30 | 10:00 LFS


A4 INdulge! MOVIE REVIEW

EDGEDAVAO

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

Glitz, glamour and gloom.. FFROM A1 excessive amounts of liquor and smokes, fuel Don because it somehow superficially and subconsciously masks his sense of inadequacy and a troubled history. For Gatsby (Leonardo Dicaprio), his immense wealth was all to win back the love of his life Daisy (Carey Mulligan). he thinks that amassing and matching the wealth of Tom Buchanan (Joel edgerton), the man who married Daisy after Gatsby left her for war and refused to marry her because he was penniless, was the key to do this. Gatsby succumbed to bootlegging, which was rampant during the 1920s Prohibition era (though not explicitly mentioned in the film) which resulted into wayward consumption of alcohol, the rise of secret clubs were liquor poured like fountains, such as the one where we get to meet Meyer Wolfsheim (played by Indian cinema’s celebrated icon Amitabh Bachchan), and perhaps the early mark of the American mafia, introduced as a gambler who fixed the 1919 World Series, to the film’s narrator, Nick Carraway (Tobey Maguire). All of Gatsby’s dubious trade, loves and desires were privy to Nick, who became his confidante after being “formally” invited to one of Gatsby’s lavish parties, where no one really gets invited, one just goes. We know Gatsby through his recollection of him. But all of these details of Gatsby’s life, the novel’s powerful symbolisms such as T.J. eckleburg’s eyes lording over the Valley of Ashes, a sort-of dumping site that separates Long Island from New York City proper, seems lost in the gaze of Nick, our narrator, and an aimless direction of Luhrman, who glides through the subtleties and nuances of 1920s life like a music video (the editing incoherent even unnecessarily manic) for a Jennifer Lopez dance track. For instance, Nick passing over a copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses for stacks of investment books to indicate Nick’s narration of how his interests shifted is so literal it’s cloying. Surprisingly, the use of hip-hop and contemporary pop music in the soundtrack was not offputting, giving the film a sense of innovation that is interesting. We are then made to feel that all of the weight of this excess has finally brought down on Nick,

who tells the story while he is locked in a sanitarium for alcoholism, recalling the details of the summer of 1922 when America was steeped in economic and cultural boom. Through his narration, we see Daisy Buchanan as fickle and helpless, and sometimes in the hands of Mulligan, too sensitive for our affection or sympathy, more than the character truly deserves. his attention and interest in Tom and even Jordan Baker, the famous golfer and friend to Daisy’s, remain unclear. But it is obvious that the “apple of his eye” is Gatsby, the once reclusive neighbour mysteriously gazing from his high windows. The admiration for Gatsby, the seemingly perfect embodiment of hope and love, has clouded his judgment on the man’s own foibles – “the modesty of it all”, referring to Gatsby’s elaborate request to meet Daisy at tea. But what about Nick who is supposed to be the main protagonist? Why does he naturally gravitate towards Gatsby? Does this seem to mirror his feelings of incompleteness? What to speak of these keen observations and admirations for the man? These gray areas would have made Nick a more interesting character, but Luhrman is content in making him a passive observer and while Maguire’s stare is replete with mystery and longing, we can’t seem to care for him in the end. Lurhmann literally transforms Nick’s recollection into a novel-writing therapy session, an excuse of an escape to his misery,

or perhaps a gnawing tedium, in my opinion, and one that doesn’t give justice to his character. It’s a shame because Leonardo Dicaprio captures the spirit of Gatsby well but his performance seems to be squandered and lost in the affluence and aimlessness. Dicaprio skilfully makes use of his movie-star quality and his boy-trapped-in-an-adultman persona sometimes to a heart-rending effect. In those hollywood-lit

scenes, he looks like a young Cary Grant. his aqua blue eyes reflecting the blue of the sea, as he reaches for that impossible green light. In his final plunge in the pool with his face toward the sky, his eyes flash the numerous troubled and tragic characters he once played, like the ill-fated Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, the ambitious howard hughes in The Aviator, Barry Corrigan in The Departed, or most recently, and his finest performance I think, as Frank Wheeler, the beleaguered 1950s husband to Kate Winslet in Revolutionary Road. In responding to the early reviews of the film, Luhrmann said that even early reviews to Fitzgerald’s novel, which was published in 1925, a kind of prophetic vision four years before the Great Depression, were not favourable, hinting that the latest adaptation to the novel may find it’s appreciation not in its own time, is a snobbish claim for someone who thinks that the roaring 20s was all glitz, glamour and the opulence of parties. It’s like saying that somehow we just have to sift through the meaninglessness and hedonism – like what Jordan Baker said, “large parties are intimate” – and figure out the tragedy of its own irony by ourselves. Rating: 2.75/5


EDGEDAVAO VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

SPORTS 15

LeBron James of the Miami Heat handles the ball against Paul George of the Indiana Pacers in the first quarter during Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals at AmericanAirlines Arena on Friday in Miami, Florida.

BACKFIRE ‘BRON Bad decision deals Heat Game 2 loss M

IaMI (aP) -- David West’s right hand helped the Indiana Pacers grab home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference finals. Roy Hibbert scored 29 points, West knocked away two passes by LeBron James for huge turnovers in the final minute, and the Pacers evened the East title series with a 9793 victory over the Miami Heat in Game 2 of the series on Friday night. Paul George scored 22 points, George Hill added 18 and West finished with 13 for the Pacers, who

handed the Heat just their fourth loss in their last 50 games. The series resumes with Game 3 on Sunday night in Indianapolis. James scored 36 points for the Heat, who got 17 points from Chris Bosh and 14 from Dwyane Wade. The Heat led 8884 in the fourth quarter, then were outscored 13-5 the rest of the way. and West was the biggest reason. With Indiana up 9593, West intercepted a pass that James was throwing to Ray allen with 43 seconds left, but

the Pacers didn’t even get a shot off on the ensuing possession. In fact, Indiana may have gotten a bit lucky that the shot clock expired with the ball rolling around - if Wade had collected the ball in time, he had Mario Chalmers all alone at the other end in position to almost certainly tie the game. on the next Miami possession, James drove to the right block, spun and tried passing out toward the perimeter. He released the ball, and West got his right hand on it to knock it offcourse. Immediately af-

Republic of the Philippines office of the President HoUSING aND LaND USE REGULaToRY BoaRD Southern Mindanao Region PAUNAWA

Ipauunawa na sila SPS. LINDa PaCQUING FaDRILaN aND vICToRIo v. FaDRILaN JR. (Landowner) and RPRP vENTURES MaNaGEMENT aND DEvELoPMENT CoRPoRaTIoN (Developer) ay naghahanap sa housing and Land Use Regulatory Board ng isangi panumpang nakalala para sa bilihan ng mga condominium units sa LINNvILLE RESIDENCES na matatagpuan sa Brgy. Maa, Talomo Dist., Davao City na sinasakop ng Lot Nos. 34-a-7-B of Psd-11-096379; na ang nakatalang pahayag at ang lahat ng kasulatang nakakabit doon ay nakahanda sa pagsusuri ng sinumang tao na nagtataglay ng legal na interes doon pagkaraan ng wastong aplikasyon;l at ang mga kasulatan ay ibibigay sa nabanggit na tao pagkatapos ng kaukulang bayad. Sinumang tao na may kapani-paniwalang pagtutol sa pagkatala ng proyekto ay maaring magbigay ng nilagdaang pagtutol sa Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board, 2nd Floor, G.B. Cam Bldg., corner alvarez and Monteverde Sts., Davao City na may telepono bilang 222-2895 na hindi hihigit sa loob ng limang (5) araw mula sa pinakahulking pagkalathala. Lungsod ng Dabaw, Pilipinas, ika-14 ng Mayo 2013.

Atty. RM MIGUEL T. PALMA GIL Regional Director

terward, West took that same hand and extended it skyward in celebration. The Pacers - just as they did in the second-round series last year - knew they were winning Game 2 in Miami. Hill made two free throws with 8.3 seconds left to clinch it, and just like that, Miami’s home-court advantage was gone. Lance Stephenson scored 10 for the Pacers. The Heat trailed for virtually all of the game’s first 30 minutes, then tied the game three times in the third quarter - but Indiana always had a response. When the game was tied at 60, the Pacers scored seven of the next 10 points. Tied at 67, George quickly had a layup to put the Pacers back on top. Tied at 69, George struck again, this time with a jumper. With 5.1 seconds left in the third, George drove the lane and finished a highlight-reel dunk over Miami’s Chris andersen while getting fouled, the free throw putting the Pacers up by five. James connected on a long 3-pointer to close the quarter, then he and George exchanged a few words afterward and slapped each other’s hand as if to say, ‘’here we go.’’ Sure enough, the show was just getting started.

Hibbert was creating one problem after another for Miami, so James took it upon himself to find a solution in the fourth. and with about 8 minutes left, he swatted a putback attempt away from the 7-foot-2 Indiana center, starting a play that ended with Chalmers scoring at the other end to give Miami an 85-84 lead. on the next possession, James tied up a rebound with Hibbert, then won the ensuing jump ball. Not long afterward, Bosh made a 3-pointer and Miami’s lead was up to 88-84 - its biggest of the night. Indiana scored the next five points to reclaim the lead. James’ three-point play with 3:32 left put the Heat on top 91-89, and Hibbert answered that with a jump hook over the reigning MvP to tie the game for the 10th time. If there was any remaining lament from losing Game 1 on the final play of overtime, the Pacers made sure it didn’t show. They trailed for all of 15 seconds in the first half, and after neither team held a lead of more than seven in the series opener, Indiana found itself leading by 10 late in the first quarter and by 13 with a minute to go

before intermission. Hibbert was either unguarded or unguardable, making six of his eight shots in the first two quarters and getting to the line on the way to a 19-point half. West, Hill and George combined for 27 more before the break, and when Hibbert scored with 1:25 left the Pacers’ lead was 53-40. The Heat needed less than a minute to erase more than half of that deficit. James made a pair of free throws with 59.1 seconds left, Chalmers had a layup and Mike Miller - who hadn’t taken a shot since May 8, but checked in with 3:23 remaining in the half after allen and Shane Battier continued to struggle from the outside - connected on a 3-pointer as time expired, pulling Miami within 53-47 at the break. and when Indiana went up nine early in the third quarter, Miami responded with another burst, this time an 11-2 run highlighted by a spectacular reverse dunk by James and capped by two baskets from Wade, the last of which knotted the game at 60-all. By then, it was clear. Just like Game 1, this one wouldn’t be decided until the end.


16 SPORTS

VOL. 6 ISSUE 51 • SUNDAY - MONDAY, MAY 26-27, 2013

EDGEDAVAO

Pagara’s future on the line

By Neil Bravo

C

EBU CITY-Cocky Mexican aaron “La Joya” Herrera raised his arms and flexed his muscles as he gave the Philippines’ Jason Pagara a staredown on their last appearance together before the climb the ring late last night in the main event of Pinoy Pride XX at the Cebu Waterfront Hotel Ballroom. The Mexican’s taunt had the Filipino camp opting to shrug it off. For Pagara, defending his WBo international light welterweight title for the second time, he’d rather let his fists do the talking. The Mexican’s cockiness has obviously gotten into the nerves of Pagara but the 22-year old promising fighter out of the

vaunted aLa Stable was contained by his team to ignore the Mexican’s flamboyance in yesterday’s official weigh-in at SM City Cebu. Pagara is in a fight that will most likely be the trampoline of a bright career ahead— possibly a shot at a world title. “This fight will gauge whether Jason Pagara is ready for the big fights. It’s in his hands now to prove that he is a world title material. We have seen in him some great potentials but it will still be him who will decide his future,” said Michael aldeguer, president and CEo of aLa Promotions. The Pagara-Herrera championship fight headlines the Pinoy Pride XX of aLa Pro-

motions and aBS-CBN Sports at the Cebu Waterfront Hotel on Saturday night. The card’s supporting tenner will pit another aLa standout Genesis “azukal” Servania against Indonesian Isaac Junior in a 122lb fight. In another interesting fight, Filipino Jimrex Jaca defends his WBo oriental light welterweight championship against lanky Jose Emilio Perea of Mexico. Jaca (37-3-6 21 knockouts) came in a fit 140 pounds while Perea (29-0-2 20 knockouts) needed another hour to make the weight. “We hope to win all our fights against the Mexicans but knowing them, they will be coming out fighting,” said aldeguer.


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