We’ve got you covered from Hollywood to Broadway... and Online!
MARCH 18-24, 2022 Volume 15 - No.19 • 16 Pages
133-30 32nd Ave., Flushing, NY 11354 • Tel. (212) 655-5426
DATELINE
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
67-year-old Filipina in New York savagely beaten in anti-Asian attack PH Consulate urges authorities ‘to do more’ MOMAR G. VISAYA AJPress
A 67-year-old Filipino woman in Yonkers, New York is now recovering in a hospital after being brutally beaten in the latest anti-Asian hate attack to rock the community.
The victim was entering her apartment building in Yonkers when she was attacked from behind by the suspect. Security video shows the victim was punched 125 times, stomped on seven more times and spat on. She sustained fractures and lacerations to the head and face as well as bleeding in the brain.
Illustration shows the proposed Fil-Am Friendship Monument that will be installed in Glendale, California.
Proposed Fil-Am Friendship Monument gets unanimous approval from Glendale City Council
PAGE 4
PAGE 2
US travel mask mandate extended to April 18
Courtesy of the Filipino American Business Association of
THE proposed Filipino American Friendship Monument for the city of Glendale, California has advanced to the next phase. This comes after the Glendale City Council on Tuesday, March 8 unanimously approved the construction and installation of the monument. The monument is slated to be located
The Philippine Consulate General in New York on Monday, March 14 called on authorities “to do more to protect the vulnerable” as it expressed outrage over the violent attack that left the elderly woman seriously injured. The latest incident took place on Friday
TSA extends the mandate as the CDC reviews new approach to travel protocol by KLARIZE
MEDENILLA AJPress
ALMOST DONE. President Rodrigo Duterte responds to the queries of Kingdom of Jesus Christ, The Name Above Every Name, Inc. founder and leader Pastor Apollo Quiboloy during a pre-recorded TV interview of the Sonshine Media Network International in Davao City aired on Saturday, March 12. With few months left before stepping down from power, Duterte said he has fulfilled his campaign pledges to the people when he ran for the presidency in 2016, from attaining peace and order to fighting illegal drugs and building modern infrastructures. Malacañang
THIS week, days before the masks on transportation requirement was set to expire, U.S. officials extended the mandate through to April 18. The measure affects those who plan to travel airplanes, trains, and buses — masks will also still be required at airports, train stations, and other hubs of public transit. In a statement released on Tuesday, March 8, the agency responsible for setting safety measures for transportation, the
Fil-Am educator is one of USA TODAY’s DFA: 370 Filipinos repatriated, US to help Philippines develop nuclear power program; groups ‘Women of the Year’ evacuated from Ukraine DR. Melissa Borja, a Filipina American educator, has been named one of USA TODAY’s Women of the Year, a recognition of women across the country who have made a significant impact. Melissa Borja is a professor at the prestigious University of Michigan’s Asian/ Pacific Islander American Studies Program. She also advises an Asian American graduate student organization on campus. In 2020, she started the Virulent Hate Project, a research initiative that collects
PAGE 4
MANILA — The Department of Foreign Affairs said it has helped 370 Filipinos leave Ukraine, which Russian troops started invading in late February. As of Tuesday, March 15, the department said 286 have been repatriated, while 84 have been evacuated from Ukraine. The DFA is expecting 24 more seafarers to arrive in Manila Tuesday,
it said. During the House Committee on Overseas Workers Affairs hearing on Tuesday, the DFA reported that 39 land-based overseas Filipinos have been repatriated, while 247 seabased workers have been brought back to Manila. The DFA said in a statement that the seafarers repatriated
PAGE 2
PAGE 4
push renewable energy instead by ANGELICA
Y. YANG
Inquirer.net
MANILA — The Philippines and the United States signed a memorandum of understanding last week to work together to develop the Philippines’ nuclear power program. The MOU was signed by Energy Undersecretary Gerardo Erguiza and U.S. Undersecretary of State for Arms
Control and International Security Bonnie Jenkins. Erguiza said he believes the partnership with the U.S. will help improve the country’s capacities in building nuclear infrastructure. “Through our cooperation, we hope to ensure the peaceful use of nuclear energy and fulfill our decarbonization goals,” Philippine Ambassador to the
PAGE 4