Rabu, 28 September 2011

'PEDRING' DEATH TOLL RISES TO 33; 41 MISSING


The death toll from Typhoon “Pedring” (international name: Nesat) climbed to 33 on Wednesday night as floods submerged thousands of homes in the country. The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) reported 4 more deaths caused by the typhoon's onslaught.

NDRRMC said 3 more residents reportedly drowned in Dampalit, Malabon City and 1 was hit by a fallen tree in Bauan, Batangas. The most number of reported deaths occurred in Region 3, with 9 fatalities.

Forty-one others remained missing while 31 were injured.

Total damage in agriculture and infrastructure caused by the typhoon reached more than P1.1 billion.

In Region 3 alone, the damage was estimated to cost nearly P950 million.

A state of calamity has been declared in Malabon; Navotas; Obando, Bulacan; Isabela and Quirino in the wake of the disaster.

Some 73,228 families or 346,171 individuals in the country were affected by the typhoon, according to the NDRRMC.

The typhoon left the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) around 1 p.m. Wednesday, the state weather bureau said.

However, another tropical storm (international name: Nalgae) is expected to enter PAR on Thursday.

The weather disturbance will be named “Quiel”. -- With a report from Jenny Reyes, ABS-CBN News

Toroman out, Chot Reyes in?


MANILA, Philippines — Serbian coach Rajko Toroman will return home next week, his future with Smart-Gilas Pilipinas still uncertain.

Before his departure, Toroman is set to meet with Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas president Manny V. Pangilinan who has pledged to continue the program until the 2013 FIBA-Asia Championship.

“Ang plano ni Rajko is to go back to Serbia to rest. Sabi ko go ahead,” Pangilinan said. “Gusto niya makipag-usap before he leaves for Serbia, pag-usapan namin what went right, what went wrong with program.”

“But you should take a rest, I told him. Para luminaw ang kanyang pananaw and on my side also, gusto ko rin pag-isipan what went right, what went wrong. So tignan natin. Wala pa namang decision one way or the other,” added Pangilinan.

Toroman, who steered Iran to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, was tapped in 2009 to handle the country’s bid to qualify in the 2012 Olympics.

But Gilas lost to Jordan in the semifinals and bowed to South Korea in the battle for the bronze medal in the just-ended FIBA-Asia event, a qualifying event for London.

Source [ ManilaBulletin ]

KO WIN WILL PUT EMPHATIC END TO TRILOGY'


Freddie Roach wants Juan Manuel Marquez down and out in November. “Victory is no longer enough. I want Manny to knock out Marquez,” declared the celebrated trainer from the City of Pines yesterday.

Pacquiao and Roach are entering their second week of training in Baguio, for the Nov. 12 showdown with Marquez at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Roach spoke to reporters yesterday and said he wants Pacquiao to finish Marquez off, and shut him up.

Pacquiao is coming off a unanimous victory over Shane Mosley last May, but experts felt the Pinoy champ was a little too soft on his opponent.

They touched gloves the whole fight, smiled at each other in the days leading to the fight, and hugged like brothers at the end of the fight.

Roach doesn’t want to see that in November.

“No more Mr. Nice Guy,” he said.

But he admitted that it’s not an easy thing to do with Pacquiao because “how can you teach him not to be (nice) when he is the nicest person around.”

Still, if he could have his way, Roach said it should be war inside the ring when Pacquiao and Marquez meet for the third time.

Continue Reading at Philstar

PALEA STRIKERS MAY FACE RAPS


TOKYO — President Aquino warned striking employees of Philippine Airlines (PAL) that protesting workers could face charges, including economic sabotage, for holding a strike at the height of typhoon “Pedring” last Tuesday.

PAL suspended all flights after airline employees staged a wildcat strike to protest the impending termination of 2,600 workers.

PAL spokesperson Cielo Villaluna said the company’s management canceled the flights after members of the PAL Employees Association (PALEA) refused to work.

Some 172 PAL domestic and international flights were reportedly affected.

Over coffee with the media Tuesday night at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, the President admitted he thought about economic sabotage when he learned about the strike.

“But my lawyers are looking at how clear it (economic sabotage) is. What is clear right now is under the Civil Aviation Act of 2008, any disruption is punishable,” he said.

Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma said the President discussed the issue with Transportation and Communications Secretary Manuel Roxas II.

The President, Roxas and Coloma, along with other officials, were here for Aquino’s official working visit that started last Sunday.

Continue Reading at philstar

METRO MANILA TARGET BOMBAHIN NG JI AT ABU SAYYAF


Mayroong 12 na miyembro ng Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) mula sa Indonesia at Malaysia ang naghahanda kasabwat ang Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) para maghasik ng lagim sa Mindanao at Metro Manila, ayon sa isang analyst na nakabase sa Singapore.

“Mahigpit na nagsasab­watan ang ASG at JI na aktibong nakabase sa Sulu. Ang dalawang grupo na ito ay malapit nang makumpleto ang kanilang pagsasanib.

There are still about a dozen Indonesian and Malaysian terrorists still operating in the Sulu archipelago. They are planning and preparing terrorist attacks… in Mindanao and Metro Manila,” ayon kay Professor Rohan Guna­rathna, hepe ng Management Staff ng International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism-Singapore, sa interview ng mga reporters sa kanya noong Lunes sa naganap na 8th ASEAN Chiefs of Defense Forces Informal Meeting sa Trader’s Hotel sa Maynila.

Sinabi naman nito na aktibo namang nagagampanan ng Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) at Philippine National Police (PNP) ang kanilang tungkulin para pigilin ang planong ito ng mga terorista.

“The terrorists want to disrupt social life, they want to create fear, they want to disrupt the political pro­cess,” ayon kay Gunarathna.

Ngunit ayon kay Armed Forces’ Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence (J2) chief Maj. Gen. Francisco Cruz Jr., sa hiwalay na interview, sa kanilang pagkakaalam ay apat lamang na JI ang nasa Sulu.

“We’ve identified four in Mindanao, particularly in Sulu,” ani Cruz.

Kinumpirma pa ni Cruz na sa mga nakalipas na panahon ay nagsilayasan sa Maynila ang mga ele­mento ng JI dahil sa pina­tinding intelligence ope­ration. “Marami sa kanila ang umalis sa Manila at bumalik sila sa Indonesia, bumalik sila sa Malaysia dahil napapaso na sila sa Sulu at Basilan,” ani Cruz.

Ayon naman kay Gunarathna, sinasamantala ng ASG ang tulong teknolohiya at pagsasanay sa paggawa ng bomba at paghahasik ng lagim na siyang nananatiling pangunahing problema sa seguridad at katahimikan ng Pilipinas.

Sinabi pa nito na bagama’t napatay na ang kilalang lider ng JI na sina Omar Patek, nahuli sa Pakis­tan nitong taon, at Dulmatin na napatay sa Indonesia ilang taon na ang nakakaraan ay patuloy ang aktibong pagkilos ng JI at ASG sa bansa.

Sinabi pa ni Gunarathna na ang banta ng terorismo sa Southeast Asia ay isang bagay na hindi dapat ipagkibit-balikat.

Mahalaga rin umano ang pagtutulungan ng United States, Pilipinas, Indonesia, Australia, Europe at iba pang bansa para mapuksa ang terorismong dulot ng JI at mga kasabwat nitong grupo.

By JB Salarzon, Abante Tonite

M’CAÑANG INTERESADO SA IKAKANTA NG HIGH-PROFILE WITNESS SA POLL FRAUD


Inaasahan ng Malacañang na makakatulong ang inaasahang paglantad ng umano’y “high-profile witness” sa 2004 at 2007 poll fraud upang lumabas ang katotohanan sa isyung dayaan sa national elections.

Ayon kay deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte, interesado sila na i-monitor ang kaganapan sa Department of Justice (DOJ) hinggil sa paglantad ng sinasabing “high-profile witness” na ito.

Gayunpaman, wala pa umanong ideya si Valte kung sino ang lalantad na “high-profile witness” na ito na sinasabi ni Justice Secretary Leila De Lima.

Maliban dito ay umiwas din muna ang Malacañang na magsalita sa isyu upang hindi umano mapangunahan ang gaga­wing pagbubunyag ng DOJ sa nasabing bagay.

Naunang ibinunyag ni De Lima na may isang high-profile witness ang ihaharap ng DOJ at Commission on Elections (Comelec) na magbibigay ng detalyadong impormasyon kung paano nagkaroon ng dayaan noong 2004 at 2007 election.

“This week, I am expecting the witness who has already accessed Chair (Sixto) Brillantes. According to Chair Brillantes, he has already spoken with the witness who has already written his affidavit. But he will inform me when he can be presented,” ani De Lima sa isang press briefing.

Source [ AbanteOnline ]

DPWH TO SPEND P30 MILLION FOR REPAIR OF MANILA SEAWALL


The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will likely spend about P30 million for the repair of a portion of the seawall along Roxas Boulevard damaged by a storm surge at the height of typhoon “Pedring” last Tuesday.

DPWH-National Capital Region director Reynaldo Tagudando said that based on their initial assessment, about 750 meters of the seawall was destroyed by the waves.

He said they would start the repair of the seawall as soon as the weather improves.

“As of now we are assessing the appropriate restoration. We will put sandbags as a temporary measure,” Tagudando said.

He said both lanes of Roxas Boulevard were already passable to all types of vehicles.

A total of 250 DPWH personnel yesterday joined the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority and employees of the Manila City government in the clean up drive following Pedring’s onslaught.

Tiles at the Baywalk area were also damaged as waves toppled trees.

Continue Reading at Philstar

Libu-libo naistranded sa welga ng PALEA


MANILA, Philippines - Libu-libong pasahero ng Philippine Airlines ang naistranded dahil sa pagwewelga kahapon ng mga empleyado nito bagaman sinabi ng Malacañang na meron nang conciliation meeting ang pangasiwaan at ground worker ng kumpanya.

Bukod sa epekto ng bagyong Pedring sa mga eroplanong bumibiyahe sa Luzon, nakansela ang lahat ng flight ng PAL dahil sa welga ng Philippine Airlines Employees Association o PALEA.

Ayon naman kay PAL President Jaime Bautista, iligal ang welga ng PALEA na sapat para patawan sila ng administrative at criminal sanctions.

May 14,000 pasahero ng PAL ang naistranded anya sa paliparan dahil sa iligal na aksyon ng PALEA.

Sinasabing ang walkout ng PALEA ay kabuntot ng outsourcing ng online ticketing, flight catering at ground operations simula sa susunod na buwan.

Source [ PHILSTAR ]

Pedring Still Affecting Western Luzon: Pagasa

Prevent Cataract with Vitamin C


EYE ailments like cataract are no longer associated with old age.

Although the development of this disease is gradual and goes with the normal aging process, it can occur rapidly to people with unhealthy lifestyle.

Seniors develop cataracts but there are instances of young people getting cataracts due to excessive ultraviolet-light exposure, diabetes, smoking, or the use of certain medications, such as oral, topical, or inhaled steroids.

To keep cataracts from clouding your vision as you age, store up more on vitamin C and vegetables loaded with powerful antioxidants like bell peppers, broccoli, and oranges.

A recent study showed that people with higher blood levels of vitamin C may have a much lower risk of developing cataracts, while people with low vitamin C may suffer higher rates of the eye condition. Bell peppers, broccoli, and oranges are all super sources of this nutrient.

Nutritional status has also been investigated, but most research to date has been done on cataract prevalence in people who take vitamin C supplements, and most of the results have proved contradictory or inconclusive. But this new study is significant in that it examined cataract risk in relation to intake of vitamin-C-rich foods rather than supplements.

So why not make a few healthy changes to help keep your vision sharper longer? Red bell peppers, broccoli, oranges, cantaloupe, carrots, sweet potatoes, and squash are all great sources of vitamin C. But you should also be a faithful wearer of sunglasses to help reduce your risk. Say no to tobacco. And see your eye doctor regularly for vision screening.

(source: Journal Online)

Can Eating Fish Lower the Risk of Strokes


People who eat fish a few times each week are slightly less likely to suffer a stroke than those who only eat a little or none at all, according to an international analysis.

The omega-3 fatty acids in fish may lower stroke risk through their positive effects on blood pressure and cholesterol, wrote Susanna Larsson and Nicola Orsini of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute in the journal Stroke.

Their analysis was based on 15 studies conducted in the United States, Europe, Japan and China, each of which asked people how frequently they ate fish, then followed them for between four and 30 years to see who suffered a stroke.

“I think overall, fish does provide a beneficial package of nutrients, in particular the omega-3s, that could explain this lower risk,” said Dariush Mozaffarian, a Harvard School of Public Health epidemiologist whose research was included in the analysis.

“A lot of the evidence comes together suggesting that about two to three servings per week is enough to get the benefit.”

Vitamin D, selenium, and certain types of proteins in fish may also have stroke related benefits, he added.

Data for the analysis came from close to 400,000 people aged 30 to 103.

Over anywhere from a few years to a few decades, about 9,400 people had a stroke. Eating three extra servings of fish each week was linked to a six-percent drop in stroke risk, which translates to one fewer stroke among a hundred people eating extra fish over a lifetime.

The people in each study who ate the most fish were 12 percent less likely to have a stroke than those that ate the least.

Mozaffarian’s report separated the effects of different kinds of fish and found that people who ate more fried fish and fish sandwiches, not surprisingly, didn’t get any stroke benefit.
But the research can’t prove that adding more non fried fish to your diet will keep you from having a stroke, Mozaffarian told Reuters Health.

People “could have healthier diets in other ways, people could exercise more, people could have better education that could lead them to see their doctors more,” he added, all of which could decrease their risk of strokes.

Still, most studies have tried to take those other health and nutrition factors into account to isolate the effects of fish as much as possible and they suggest a cause and effect relationship, he said.

It’s likely that people who start out eating no fish or very little probably have the most to gain by putting it on their plate more often.

“You get a lot of bang for your buck when you go from low intake to moderate, a few servings per week,” Mozaffarian said.

After that, the benefit from each extra serving probably goes down.

Fatty fish such as salmon and herring are especially high in omega-3s, The American Heart Association recommends at least two servings of fatty fish in particular each week.

(source: Manila Bulletin)

PHL Donates $1 M for Reconstruction of Japan City Hall


President Aquino traveled by bullet train and car for more than three hours to get to this northeastern city from Tokyo and personally hand over the Philippines’ $1-million donation for the reconstruction of the local city hall destroyed by earthquake and tsunami last March.

The President, members of his delegation, and media had to take the bullet train for one hour and 41 minutes and travel another hour and 30 minutes by car to get here and the Kadonowaki district, which were damaged by the tsunami along with Ayukawa district.
Mayor Hiroshi Kameyama welcomed the President and received the Philippine government’s donation along with other local officials in their temporary offices in a local mall.

Aquino was the first head of state to have gone to Ishinomaki since most of those who came earlier to express their solidarity with this country went to Sendai City.

The President offered a wreath in front of the Kadonowaki Elementary School where many students perished during the earthquake and tsunami. The mayor accompanied Aquino and briefed him about the disaster.

It is in this city where traces of the devastation are still evident unlike in Sendai City, which has apparently recovered.

Continue reading at Philippine Star

Pinays in Malaysia Lose RM20,000 to Burglars


Four Filipino women reported total losses of more than RM20,000 to burglars who broke into their rented house in Bintawa last Sunday.

The four Filipino women, aged 20s to 30s, were working at a night entertainment place at Sungai Maong.

When they reached home after work around 3am, they found the house had been broken in through the back door.

It was in a mess; three rooms had been searched and the thieves took RM18,000 in jewellery and two laptops.

They made a police report and police are investigating.

Continue reading at Borneo Post

Emirati Gets 10 Years Jail Term for Kidnapping, Molesting Pinay


An Emirati man was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Sunday by the Court of First Instance for kidnapping and molesting a woman cleaner. The verdict is open to appeal within 15 wdays.

According to prosecution records, the defendant, a 28-year-old jobless, kidnapped the Filipina cleaner after he lured her into his car posing as a CID officer (Criminal Investigation Department). The court also convicted the accused of charges of impersonating as a public officer and theft.

The Filipina cleaner, 26, who works at a hotel, told the investigating prosecutor that the incident happened in Umm Suqeim.

In her statement, she said that the local man stopped his vehicle as she was waiting at a bus stop in Jumeirah.

It was about 11am on November 30 last year. He stopped near her and said he worked for the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs.

Continue reading at Khaleej Times

The ABC Song - For KIDS


An alphabet song is any of various songs used to teach children an alphabet, used in kindergartens, pre-schools and homes around the world.

Row, Row, Row Your Boat - For KIDS


"Row, Row, Row Your Boat" is an English language nursery rhyme, and a popular children's song, often sung as a round. It can also be an 'action' nursery rhyme where singers sit opposite one another and 'row' forwards and backwards with joined hands. Watch the video below after the jump.



Row, row, row your boat, Gently down the stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily, Life is but a dream.

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star - For KIDS


"Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" is a popular English nursery rhyme. The lyrics are from an early nineteenth-century English poem, "The Star" by Jane Taylor. The poem, which is in couplet form, was first published in 1806 in Rhymes for the Nursery, a collection of poems by Taylor and her sister Ann.



Twinkle, twinkle, little star. How I wonder what you are. Up above the world so high, Like a diamond in the sky. Twinkle, twinkle, little star. How I wonder what you are.

Selasa, 27 September 2011

Singapore’s Resort World Sentosa Seeks to Fill 1,000 Vacancies


While Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) used to draw crowds of 6,000 to 8,000 to its recruitment fairs in 2009 during the economic downturn, a turnout of 500 to 600 now would be enough to make the integrated resort “very happy

The tight job market has made it a challenge for RWS to hire, as it looks to fill about 1,000 vacancies for its new facilities, which will include a maritime museum and aquarium and two hotels, said senior vice-president of HR and training Ms Seah-Khoo Ee Boon.

More than 500 of the vacancies are in RWS’ Marine Life Park, which is scheduled to open in the second half of next year.

Some of the vacant positions include aquarists, marine mammal specialists and divers – specialised jobs which are challenging to fill.

But the IR, which has held job fairs in HDB heartlands in recent months, will remain focused on hiring Singaporeans, stressed Ms Seah-Khoo at a press briefing on Monday.

Continue reading at Channel News Asia

DOLE: No Massive OFW Displacement Despite Europe Crisis


The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) sees no massive displacement of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) despite the debt crisis in Europe.

Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said the debt crisis affecting Italy and other European countries is unlikely to affect employment of Filipino workers there.

“Even if there is crisis, usually the employers do not pre-terminate existing contracts. They are just finishing their contracts so it won’t affect our workers there,” Baldoz said.

Baldoz noted the DOLE has not observed any sharp decline in hiring or job orders for Filipino workers in Europe at present.

Continue reading at Philippine Star

Dry Clean Operator in Canada Accused of Running Visa Business


Gloria Delos Santos will dry clean your dress shirt for $1.99. She promises next day service.

She also claims that for $5,000 she can get an immigration visa to bring your relative to Canada in as little as three months.
The shirt will be delivered on time. Your relatives, not so much. If ever.

A Star investigation shows Santos is running a visa business from her Glory’s Dry Cleaning store in a Scarborough strip mall at Ellesmere and Midland Aves.

Sandwiched between a tattoo parlour and a barber shop, Santos deals mainly with the Filipino community. According to people who have paid for her services, Santos has told them she is connected to an official in the federal immigration department who can expedite the paperwork to bring loved ones to Canada.


A federal law passed earlier this year makes it illegal for anyone other than lawyers, paralegals or licensed immigration consultants to provide advice or make any representation at any stage of an immigration proceeding. Dry cleaners are not on the list.


Continue reading at The Star

Michael Jackson killed himself, doctor's lawyer claims


This image, taken from the prosecution courtroom evidence screen, purports to show Michael Jackson lying on a hospital gurney during opening arguments in Dr. Conrad Murray's trial in the death of pop star Michael Jackson in Los Angeles Tuesday.
Photograph by: CNN/Pool, Reuters


LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson's doctor was guilty of "gross negligence" which led to the pop icon's death, a prosecutor said Tuesday — but the medic's lawyer countered bluntly that the star killed himself.

At the start of Conrad Murray's long-awaited manslaughter trial, his lawyer said the King of Pop took two different drugs while the doctor was out of the room at the star's rented Holmby Hills mansion, on June 25, 2009.

"He did an act without his doctor's knowledge, without his doctor's permission, against his orders, he did an act that caused his own death," said lawyer Ed Chernoff.

Specifically he said Jackson swallowed eight two-milligram lorazepam pills, pushing his blood concentration of lorazepam to 0.169 micrograms per milliliter, enough to put six people to sleep.


Jackson "did this when Dr. Murray was not around," Chernoff said, claiming the 50-year-old singer also gave himself an extra dose of powerful sedative propofol, which he was using to help him get to sleep.

"The scientific evidence will show you that when Dr. Murray left the room, Michael Jackson self-administered a dose of propofol that, with the lorazepam, created a perfect storm in his body."

The combination "killed him instantly . . . He died so rapidly, so instantly, he didn't even have time to close his eyes," he said.

Murray, 58, faces up to four years in jail if convicted by a jury of seven men and five women of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson's death, as the star was preparing for a series of comeback concerts.


Specifically he allegedly gave Jackson an overdose of the powerful sedative propofol — which Jackson himself referred to as "milk" — to help alleviate his insomnia at a rented estate in the posh Holmby Hills neighborhood of LA.

Murray, trained as a cardiologist, has never denied giving Jackson propofol, which typically is used as an anesthetic during surgery, but he denies having "abandoned his patient" at a critical, and ultimately fatal, moment.

In the prosecution's opening statement, deputy district attorney David Walgren said: "The evidence . . . will show that Michael Jackson literally put his life in the hands of Conrad Murray.

"That misplaced trust . . . cost Michael Jackson his life," he added, claiming Murray was motivated more by his $150,000 contract with Jackson than by his duty of care to the singer.

The doctor made a series of phone calls — and even emailed an insurance agent dismissing media reports that Jackson was too sick to play the London concerts — while Jackson lay dying, he said.

Walgren also played an audio recording of an apparently heavily-drugged Jackson talking in a slurred voice to Murray, a month and a half before his death — suggesting this showed the doctor was well aware of how ill Jackson was.

Jackson's mother Katherine and father Joe were in court, along with his siblings Jermaine, Janet, LaToya, Randy, Tito and Rebbie.

At least 300 fans and others lined up outside the court, some chanting "murderer" at Murray, At one point before the trial started a woman tried to attack the doctor, but was stopped by security guards, reports said.

The first witness expected to be called was Kenny Ortega, the producer of Jackson's "This Is It" shows — clips of which may also be played in court during the trial.

The panel to decide Murray's fate includes six white jurors, five Hispanics and one African American. They include high school graduates, some jurors with a college education, and one with a masters in business degree.

Half of the panel's members are Jackson fans — a 54-year-old juror wrote that she "loved his music as a very young girl, as an adult not so much" — while one juror, a cartoon animator, once met Jackson.

Even before the trial started, some Jackson fans were saying Murray should face a more serious charge.

"He should have been charged with second degree murder," said Erin Jacobs, head of the organization "Justice4mj," 10 of whose members were outside court in black T-shirts bearing their group's name.

© Copyright (c) AFP

Dead Sea scrolls online as ancient meets modern


A facsimile of the Isaiah Scroll, one of the Dead Sea Scrolls, is displayed inside the Shrine of the Book at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem Monday. Developed in partnership with Google, the Israel Museum on Monday launched its Dead Sea Scrolls Digital Project, allowing users to explore the ancient manuscripts from the period of the Second Jewish Temple. Five complete scrolls from the Israel Museum have been digitized for the project at this stage and are accessible online.
Photograph by: Baz Ratner, Reuters


JERUSALEM — Five of the main Dead Sea scrolls, containing some of the oldest-known surviving biblical texts, were on Monday put online as part of a joint project between the Israel Museum and Google.

The project gives the public access to ultra high-resolution images of the ancient scrolls in a format which is easily searchable, with the magnified text revealing details previously invisible to the naked eye, a museum statement said.

So far, five of the scrolls have been digitised as part of the $3.5-million project which uses space-age technology to produce the clearest renderings yet of the ancient texts: the Great Isaiah scroll, the Community Rule scroll, the commentary on Habbakuk, the Temple scroll and the War scroll.

By visiting http://dss.collections.imj.org.il/ web users can view all of the text, as well as a translation tool and other background information on the documents, the museum said.

"We are privileged to house in the Israel Museum's Shrine of the Book the best preserved and most complete Dead Sea Scrolls ever discovered," Israel Museum director James Snyder said in a statement, describing them as of "paramount importance" for the world's monotheistic religions.

"Now, through our partnership with Google, we are able to bring these treasures to the broadest possible public."

The 900 biblical and other manuscripts, comprising some 30,000 fragments, were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in the Qumran caves above the Dead Sea and photographed in their entirety with infra-red technology in the 1950s.

The parchment and papyrus scrolls contain Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic writing, and include several of the earliest-known texts from the Bible, including the oldest surviving copy of the Ten Commandments.

The oldest of the documents dates to the third century BC and the most recent to about 70 AD, when Roman troops destroyed the Second Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

The artefacts are housed at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, where the larger pieces are shown at the dimly lit Shrine of the Book on a rotational basis in order to minimise damage from exposure.

When not on show, they are kept in a dark, climate-controlled storeroom in conditions similar to those in the Qumran caves, where the humidity, temperature and darkness preserved the scrolls for two millennia.

© Copyright (c) AFP

Bigger anti-smoking warnings coming by June


An image of anti-smoking crusader Barb Tarbox, who documented her battle with cancer, will be among those featured on cigarette packages in Canada starting in June. U.S. officials announced last year they were considering using Tarbox's image as well. Photograph by: Handout, AFP

OTTAWA — Cigarette packs are about to get a whole lot more jarring in Canada.

Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq, accompanied by the widower and daughter of anti-smoking crusader Barb Tarbox, visited a school in Ottawa on Tuesday to announce that tobacco companies will have to start selling revamped cigarette packages by next June.

Twelve new images will cover 75 per cent of the outside panel of cigarette packages and eight new health messages will appear on the inside in full colour in an attempt to turn off smokers.

A picture of a dying Barb Tarbox, a lifelong smoker who died of lung cancer in 2003 at age 42, will be among the new images on the outside panels.

"This is one story of many in Canada, and the family agreed to help and work with us to get their message to Canadians, and I thank them for their courage and their leadership in trying to reach out to young people," the health minister said Tuesday.

Speaking directly to the Grade 8 students on hand for the announcement, Pat Tarbox said the picture of his late wife is still shocking for their family to see and "it freaks out a lot people." That's the point, he said.

"We're hoping her image will have an impact on a lot of youth and that's really what Barb wanted to do," said Tarbox, whose late wife documented her illness and spoke to schools across the country in the months before her death as part of an anti-smoking campaign.

"It's a stark reality of what cancer looks like. If you think smoking is cool, 20 years down the road, you don't look so cool when you're lying in a hospital bed deteriorating," added Tarbox.

Their daughter, Mackenzie, 18, who was nine years old when her mother died and is now a first-year university student, said the image of her mother represents "just what it means to have cancer. I just think that you guys should just never start and if you have, stop. Could you imagine telling your nine-year old daughter that you might not be there for Christmas?' "

Currently, health warnings cover 50 per cent of the outside panel of cigarette packages, but Health Canada research has consistently shown that smokers have dulled to the old graphics, first introduced in 2001.

As part of the new rules, tobacco companies will also have to include four toxic-emission messages for the side panel, along with a national toll-free quit line.

Rob Cunningham, a senior policy analyst for the Canadian Cancer Society, was on hand to laud the government for showing "global leadership."

He added: "This is a blockbuster in terms of public health because it costs the government virtually nothing to do but it does have an impact in the short and long term."

Initially, the government planned to have the old packs out of the marketplace by next March, but a delay in publishing the final regulations means the industry has another three months to transition.

Aglukkaq committed to the new regulations last December after she signalled in the fall that the file was on hold so the federal government could focus on combating contraband cigarettes.

A month before Aglukkaq made this commitment, Tarbox lamented what he saw as foot-dragging on the part of the federal government after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it was considering using Barb's image on cigarette packages sold in the U.S.

Since then, the U.S. plan to cover the top half, front and back, of cigarette packaging with graphic warnings has been put on hold by a lawsuit filed by tobacco companies. The companies allege the mandated health warnings violate their free speech, given that cigarettes are a legal product but the warnings urge prospective customers not to buy them.

sschmidt@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/SarahSchmidtPN

© Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Cranberry Juice Para sa UTI


May urinary tract infection (UTI) ka ba? Uminom ng cranberry juice. Hindi alam ng mga expert kung paano ito nakakatulong laban sa UTI at kung gaano karami ang dapat inumin. Pero malaking tulong ito sa mga babaeng pabalik-balik ang UTI.

Kung mahilig ka sa cranberry juice, ipagpatuloy ang pag-inom nito, lalo na kung may epekto ito sa UTI mo. Hindi naman ito delikado ngunit maaari kang magkaroon ng sakit ng tiyan o diarrhea. Pero iwasan ang cranberry juice kapag gumagamit ka ng mga blood-thinning drugs tulad ng warfarin.

(source: Abante Online)

Makati Buendia Osmena Collapsed Billboard


Makati Buendia Osmena Collapsed Billboard (Typhoon Pedring) 9.27.11.

Video of the collapsed billboard at Osmena-Buendia Makati


Pedrings Typhoon Pictures


Typhoon Pedring, internationally known as Typhoon Nesat, has hit the capital of the Philippines with strong gusting winds and a fierce wall of water!





Revert back to the “old” Facebook layout


So Facebook surprises its users with the new layout. The new layout include the live news feed of your friends’ activity – commenting, liking, posting a new status, uploading new photos, as a hide-able right sidebar.

You can also preview the activity when hovering over the activity. This replaces the recent activity tab previously seen in the “old” layout.

But not all improvements satisfy the users. Good thing, it can be reverted back to its old layout by changing some of the account settings.

1. Login to Facebook.
2. Click on the Account Settings.
3. Change the Language into English (UK).
4. Voila! You’re back to the old Facebook layout.

Read more: http://iamjammed.com/tips/revert-back-to-the-old-facebook-layout-by-changing-language-settings-to-english-uk/#ixzz1ZAZxkU00
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

Typhoon Pedring batters the Philippines with pictures


27 September 2011: Filipinos look at the damage done by strong waves at the Manila Bay walk area in Roxas Boulevard in Manila, caused by Typhoon Pedring (Nesat) which slammed into Luzon. Strong rain had caused flooding in nearby provinces and strong winds toppled power lines and left millions of Filipinos without electricity. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Kibitzers enjoy getting soaked by strong waves at the Manila Bay walk at Roxas Boulevard in Manila, caused strong waves and piles of garbage as Typhoon Pedring (Nesat) slammed into Luzon. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)





Filipinos and vehicles try to navigate through flooded Roxas Boulevard in Manila. (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Vehicles try to navigate through flooded Roxas Boulevard in Manila, (Mike Alquinto/NPPA Images)


Kibitzers watch as strong waves slam into a damaged part of the Manila Bay dike at Roxas Boulevard in Manila.

How to make a cheap mosquito trap using sugar and yeast to prevent dengue?


Dengue is at its peak during these months. Although health authorities say that cases continue to decline, dengue still pose threat especially to children.

In some parts of the country like Nueva Ecija, which ranks second with the most cases of dengue in Central Luzon, fumigation is not sufficient to drive away these dengue-carrying mosquitoes.

The local health officials have devised a simple method to help minimize the wrath of dengue – a mosquito trap they named “sweet potion.”

In a local news program, the officials shared how they do the mosquito trap.

And here’s how to do the mosquito trap:

Materials needed:
- empty 1.5 bottle of soft drink painted with black.
- 4 tbsp of brown sugar
- 250 ml water
- 1 tbsp of yeast (pampaalsa)

Procedure:
1. Cut the upper portion of the empty 1.5 ml bottle, this will serve as a funnel and the lower part will serve as the mixing container.
2. Pour 250 ml of water in the mixing container.
3. Put 4 tbsp of brown sugar into it and thoroughly mix them.
4. Add a tbsp of yeast onto the mixture. The mixture will undergo oxidation which will emit aroma to attract the mosquitoes. The black color of the container will further attract them.

The Department of Health (DOH) recommends at least 4-set mosquito traps, ideally put up inside and outside the house. According to the news, the cost will only be P5.00.

Courtesy of: ABS-CBN, Bandila

NOY SATISFACTION RATING UP IN Q3 - SWS


President Aquino’s net satisfaction rating went up by 10 percentage points in the latest survey by the Social Weather Stations (SWS).

The SWS Third Quarter of 2011 survey, conducted from Sept. 4 to Sept. 7, showed the President’s net satisfaction rating at a “very good” +56 from the “good” +46 in June.

“This is further evidence that the overwhelming majority of Filipinos who choose to keep open minds are clearly getting the President’s message; and that they are experiencing the positive changes in this country,” presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said yesterday of the survey results.

The SWS poll also found 70 percent of the respondents satisfied with Aquino’s performance, up from 64 percent in June. Those who said otherwise accounted for 14 percent, an improvement from the previous 18 percent.

A two-point drop, however, was recorded in Metro Manila although the figure was still at “good” +41 (61 percent satisfied, 20 percent dissatisfied).

In the rest of Luzon, Aquino’s net satisfaction rating rose by 22 points to “very good” +63 from “good” +41 (60 percent satisfied, 19 percent dissatisfied).

He also maintained “very good” scores in the Visayas and Mindanao, at +52 (70 percent satisfied, 18 percent dissatisfied) and +55 (68 percent satisfied, 14 percent dissatisfied), respectively. The net satisfaction rating is obtained by subtracting the percentage of dissatisfied respondents from the satisfied.

Continue reading at philstar

Tickets to Tuesday’s UAAP cage finals to be honored Saturday


MANILA -- Broadcast giant ABS-CBN said Tuesday that tickets to the UAAP men’s basketball championship match between defending champion Ateneo de Manila and Far Eastern University will be accepted on Saturday.

“UAAP Game 2 (was) reset for October 1. Tickets for today will be honored then. Game 3, if necessary, has yet to be announced,” ABS-CBN associate producer Diana Sayson said in a text message.

Strong rains and winds caused by Typhoon Pedring (international codename: Nesat) pushed the UAAP board to cancel the penultimate game on Tuesday as Ateneo guns for its fourth straight title.

Ateneo leaned on a second half rally to humble FEU, 82-64, before some 19,000 fans at the Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City last Saturday. (Virgil Lopez/Sunnex)

Source Sunstar

'Pedring' kills 5 in Metro Manila


MANILA, Philippines - At least five people have been reported killed in Metro Manila as typhoon "Pedring" continued to slam the metropolis with strong winds before noon today.

Radio reports said that four people were buried alive inside their house after a wall collapsed in Barangay Mapulang Lupa, Valenzuela this morning.

The fatalities include a grandmother and her three grandchildren, report said.

The report said that the four victims were about to leave the house when the wall collapsed into their home due to strong winds.

Authorities are waiting for a backhoe to dig up the bodies under mud and debris.

An earlier report said that a mother died and her 13-year-old son was hurt after a tree fell into their makeshift house in Caloocan City.

The incident happened around 6:15 a.m.

In its 6 a.m. report, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said that one-year-old Chawn Andrie Daliora died after falling into a creek in Barangay Cabugao, Bato town, Catanduanes province. The boy's body was recovered 10:00 p.m. yesterday.

Continue Reading at Manila Bulletin

Minggu, 25 September 2011

Aquino to Visit Tsunami-hit Area in Japan Trip


President Aquino is putting a sentimental touch on his official working visit here by visiting Sendai, the place worst hit by the tsunami following the powerful earthquake rocked this country last March.

Aquino arrives here today on the first day of his visit and tomorrow, he will make time to visit residents who are currently taking refuge at an evacuation center in Ishinomaki City at Miyagi Prefecture.

Aquino will also attend a gathering of the Filipino community there and have a brief meeting with Miyagi Prefecture and city officials.

Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary for Asian and Pacific Affairs Maria Theresa Lazaro said Aquino would be bringing a “gift” for the people of Japan.

Sendai is the capital of Miyagi Prefecture and the largest city in the Tohoku region.

In his interview with Japanese media in Manila as a prelude for this visit, Aquino said he would like to visit the Filipinos who were affected by the tragedies and “demonstrate solidarity with the Japanese people.”

“There is also another package of assistance, the exact form is still being handled by the (Philippine) embassy, it’s something we decided to give. There’s an amount that we have set aside that is quite substantial by our standards but not too substantial as far as Japan is concerned, but basically it’s a significant indication of the expression of our solidarity with the Japanese people,” Aquino said.

Continue reading at Philippine Star

Sabtu, 24 September 2011

'Keep a close eye on global economy'


MANILA, Philippines - President Aquino has ordered his economic team to closely monitor international economic developments and to craft measures that would shield the Philippines from the impact of a possible recession.

Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte said they are continuously implementing programs to mitigate the effects of the looming slowdown on the poor.

“The instruction of the President is to keep a close eye on what is happening globally. We have seen in the past few weeks the slowdown in other countries. We will watch closely what we can do and prepare so we won’t be affected by the slowdown,” Valte told state-run radio station dzRB yesterday.

Valte said the government already has programs to generate employment and to assist the country’s vulnerable sectors.

“Our (approach) is to create more jobs. Our CCT (conditional cash transfer) is still in place to help those who need it most,” the Palace official said.

“Our efforts do not stop there. The DPWH (Department of Public Works and Highways) and DSWD (Department of Social Welfare and Development) have tied up to launch the livelihood arm of CCT,” she added.

Continue Reading at Philstar

(UPDATE) Jordan shoots down SMART-Gilas’ London dreams


Breaking the hearts of Filipino fans is getting to become a tradition for the Jordan national basketball team.

In the 2007 FIBA Asia Championship in Tokushima, Japan, a loss to the Jordanians doomed the chances of Chot Reyes’ Philippine team from escaping the opening round of the tournament. In the 2009 edition of the competition in Tianjin, China, Yeng Guiao’s national squad also suffered a bitter quarterfinals defeat at the hands of the same team.

This year in Wuhan, Jordan continued the trend, pummeling SMART-Gilas, 75-61, in their semifinal matchup on Saturday.

As in the past tournaments, the trio of naturalized backcourt dynamo Rasheim Wright, star point guard Sam Daghles, and sharpshooting big man Zaid Abbas did the most damage against the Philippines. Wright, who struggled in the the Philippines’ win over Jordan earlier in the tournament, was brilliant all game long, scoring 24 points. Daghles added 16 points and 4 assists while Abbas had 14 points and four rebounds.

Perhaps just as importantly, Jordan sprung a 2-3 zone that the Philippines couldn’t quite solve all game long.

Marcus Douthit and Jayvee Casio carried the fight for SMART-Gilas with 21 and 16 points, respectively.

The Filipinos started the game oozing with confidence, leading by as much as eight points, 18-10, on two free throws by Marcus Douthit in the first quarter.

But Jordan, which shocked two-time defending champion Iran in the quarterfinals to set a date with the Philippines, managed to get its game going behind Wright, who took over the leadership mantle when Daghles picked up three early fouls in the first period.

With Daghlas out, Jordan became more unpredictable on offense to pull even with the Philippines. Wright continued to terrorize the Philippine defenders, making mincemeat of smaller guards thrown at him. His bucket to end the third period gave Jordan a 49-41 lead.

SMART-Gilas showed some life in the early part of the fourth quarter, energized by Kelly Williams’ rim-rattling follow-up slam as the Filipinos inched closer, 49-46. A Douthit jumper cut the Philippine deficit down to one point..

But still buoyed by their big victory over Iran the previous day, Jordan showed nerves of steel at the height of the Filipinos’ rally, with an Abbas fallaway giving his team second wind.

Jordan also made the Filipinos pay on the defensive end. The Filipinos opted to play a 2-3 zone late in the game, but the Jordanians quickly busted the defense with three quick three-pointers – two from Daghles and one from Abbas as Jordan pulled away anew, 60-48, with 3:54 left in the match.

Another basket by Abbas put Jordan on safer ground, 69-55. Another Wright basket gave his team its largest lead, 75-57, to finally take the fight out of the Filipinos, who made the semifinals of this tournament for the first time since 1987.

The Philippine team will play for the bronze on Sunday against the loser of the other semifinal pairing between China and South Korea. Apart from a podium finish, at stake in the game is a slot in a qualifying tournament for the 2012 London Olympics, the last bus for basketball teams around the world to catch a ticket to the Games.

Source : interaksyon

FIBA Asia 2011 Free Live Streaming - Smart Gilas Pilipinas vs. Jordan


FIBA Asia 2011 Free Live Streaming - Smart Gilas Pilipinas vs. Jordan


Jumat, 23 September 2011

P-Noy- Good Governance is Good Economics


Transparency and accountability are key to earning the people’s trust and ensuring “equitable progress,” President Aquino told the annual gathering here of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund on Wednesday.

“Governing with integrity, with transparency and with accountability not only heals a national psyche that has long been characterized by its cynicism and mistrust of government. It also provides the foundation for equitable progress,” he said. “Good governance therefore is good economics.”

Aquino cited the various reforms his administration has put in place, which have resulted in four credit upgrades in the past 15 months.

He said this was a “stark contrast to the lone upgrade and six downgrades meted out by various rating agencies to the Philippines in the nine and a half years of the previous administration” of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who is now a Pampanga congresswoman.

Aquino also cited the 10-point jump of the Philippines in global competitiveness ranking, “the biggest improvement we have ever recorded in the report,” released by the World Economic Forum.
“The goal is to percolate socio-economic development to a greater majority. And it all begins with cleaning up government: instituting a culture of transparency and accountability – at the bottom line, a culture of trust in government,” he said.

He also said ending corruption should also mean holding accountable those who have wronged the people.

“Without accountability, there will be no certainty that others will not follow in the footsteps of those who have wronged our people,” said Aquino.

“Without accountability, the entrenched culture of impunity will remain, the corrupt will continue to flourish and steal, and the atmosphere of doubt and mistrust will continue to linger even as we rebuild our institutions,” he added.

WB group president Robert Zoellick, for his part, took note of the contribution of hundreds of Filipino employees to the institution. Zoelick called them “the backbone of this organization.”

“At the heart of President Aquino’s policies is a belief in the power of citizens to hold their government accountable, and that this makes for better governance and a more just society. Under his leadership, the community-driven development program, which has provided poor Filipinos a voice in the development process, is set to become a national program,” said Zoellick.

Under the Aquino administration, he said the Philippines has seen extensive reforms in its budget management process, such as enhancing transparency and calling on more civil society participation.

In his speech, Aquino said that honest and transparent budgeting has reduced waste and discretionary spending as well as opportunities for corruption.

“We are spending significant sums to provide basic healthcare services to the poor. We are also working to widen access to education, and to ensure that this education is of good quality,” said Aquino.

He also revealed that social services will take up 31.7 percent or nearly a third of the national budget in 2012.

Acknowledgment
US Ambassador Harry Thomas Jr., meanwhile, said President Barack Obama’s invitation to Aquino to participate in the Open Government Initiative was also in recognition of the latter’s vigorous effort to promote transparency.

“And that is why President Aquino was selected in one of the major new presidents to meet with President Obama and the Brazilian President because of the transparency and openness that he has brought along with his senior cabinet to government and so we are very proud to be able to line ourselves with an honest government,” Thomas said in a chance interview after a roundtable discussion on Combating Human Trafficking organized by the Philippine Judicial Academy (PHILJA) and the Court of Appeals.

The United Kingdom also lauded Aquino’s commitment to transparency in government.
“The UK assures it is a partner in strengthening transparency,” said British Ambassador Stephen Lillie said in a message on Twitter.

“Transparency is essential, for secrecy and lack of accountability breeds corruption. We all know that we live in times of financial austerity; it is more essential than ever, that every peso is well spent, and that taxpayers know how it is being spent,” Lillie said. “As government seeks to implement the ambitious targets in the Philippine Development Plan, so greater transparency of budget and expenditure is needed to provide the proper checks and balance,” he said.

“If civil society organizations are engaged on the ground as part of budget consultations and expenditure monitoring, we are likely to see more efficient use of resources, leading eventually to better service delivery and development outcomes,” he added.

(source: Phil Star)

Manny Begins Sparring vs Venezuelan


Manny Pacquiao shifted to high gear when he started sparring as he prepares for his title defense against Juan Manuel Marquez in November.

“Patindi na ng patindi ang training namin (It’s just getting tougher in training),” said the Filipino boxing sensation from the City of Pines.

He’s in his first week of training in Baguio, and while his chief trainer Freddie Roach said sparring should begin next week, it actually did yesterday.

Roach was impressed with what he’d seen in Pacquiao over the last couple of days, and this could be the reason why they went on with four rounds of sparring.

Pacquiao, who started doing light training almost four weeks ago, has lightweight Jorge Linares as his sparring partner in Baguio.

In a TV interview, Pacquiao said he decided to train with Linares because the Venezuelan fighter needs more sparring rounds in his buildup for his Oct. 15 fight against Antonio Demarco of Mexico at Staples Center in Los Angeles.

Pacquiao also told local mediamen that while they’re doing the same training regimen, they’re putting more hours into it.

And more hours should mean greater results when the fight is held Nov. 12 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

“Padagdag ng padagdag yung oras ng training,” he said.

A couple of weeks ago, Roach said he wants a different Pacquiao to climb the ring against Marquez for the third time since 2004.

Roach said Pacquiao will be “more scientific” this time compared to their two previous fights when they “got a little careless just trying to land a good shot.”

Also training with Pacquiao at the Shape Up Gym of the Cooyesan Hotel are Filipino boxers Lorenzo Villanueva and Rodel Mayol.

“I’m here to share with them everything I know,” said Pacquiao.

Trainer Buboy Fernandez said the “real thing” comes next week, adding that Pacquiao is not taking anyone lightly, including Marquez.

“Hindi basta-bastang boksingero kasi si Marquez kaya dapat paghandaan (Marquez is no ordinary boxer so we need to prepare hard),” said Fernandez.

“Kahit na sabihin na nating tinalo natin siya ng dalawang beses eh dapat handa pa rin si Manny (Even if we say we’ve beaten him twice),” added Fernandez.

The first fight, at 126 pounds, ended in a draw because one of the judges scored the first round at 10-7 when he should have scored it 10-6 because Marquez went down thrice.

“Kailangan nating mag ensayo ng mabuti (We still need to train hard),” Pacquiao said.

(source: Phil Star)