SEPTEMBER 11-14, 2021 Volume 31 - No. 72 • 2 Sections – 20 Pages
Los Angeles schools to mandate Filipino man stabbed COVID vaccines for students over 12 to death in Las Vegas DATELINE
USA
FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA
by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
A FILIPINO American man was fatally STUDENTS aged 12 years and older in the United stabbed to death in his own home in Las Vegas on Friday, August 27, according to the States’ second-largest school district will be required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 before they authorities. Vergel Guintu, 48, had just returned home from dropping his son off at school when he heard a noise in his Summerlin residence located in the 10000 block of Kenton Place. While investigating, he was stabbed in the neck by 16-year-old Ethan Goin. Detectives said that Guintu’s wife and mother-in-law were at home when the incident happened. Guintu was in the kitchen when he heard someone breaking in and left his mother-in-law to check out the noise, as reported by Fox 5 Vegas. Guintu’s mother-in-law told detectives that she heard another noise and saw an intruder dressed in all black and a hood pass her. She also saw Guintu lying on the floor in a pool of blood, according to the report. Guintu’s wife, who was upstairs when the incident took place, called 911 after coming down and seeing her husband. The Las Vegas Fire and Rescue arrived and
can attend in-person classes next year. In a special meeting held Thursday, September 9, the Los Angeles Unified School Board voted unanimously to mandate vaccinations before the end of the year in response to the surge of COVID-19 cases due to the Delta variant.
Fil-Am voters weigh in on the contentious gubernatorial recall election on Sept. 14 by KLARIZE
MEDENILLA AJPress
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Envoy: PH-US alliance to continue to thrive OUTGOING United States Embassy Chargé d’ Affaires John Law is confident that the security alliance and cooperation between the U.S. and the Philippines will only continue to thrive in the years to come. “I am confident that our security alliance and our cooperative partnership will continue to thrive in the years to come, and that our countries will grow ever more secure and prosperous. My optimism is rooted in something far more profound and lasting than our shared political and economic interests; it springs from the hearts of our two peoples,” he wrote on Tuesday, September 7, in an op-ed posted on the U.S. Embassy in Manila website. “We are more than allies: we are friends and family. The ties between Americans and Filipinos stretch back over a century, refreshed each day by the close bonds among millions of our countrymen,” he added. Law also conveyed the U.S. government’s appreciation of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’ decision to restore the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA). “We deeply appreciate President Duterte’s
The LAUSD became the first major school district in the country to impose such a directive. “In order to reduce transmission and ensure students can remain on campus in the safest possible environment and receive the best education posu PAGE A2
LIFE-SAVING DOSES. A Department of Health personnel watches from afar as airport workers secure the refrigerated shipment of AstraZeneca vaccine and unload them from the plane during arrival at the NAIA Terminal 1, Parañaque City on Friday, September 10. The arrival of more vaccines is expected to further ramp the vaccination efforts of the national government. PNA photo by Robert Oswald P. Alfiler
AS gubernatorial candidates for the California recall election make last-ditch efforts to appeal to voters, the highly anticipated vote on whether or not to recall and replace Governor Gavin Newsom is this Tuesday, Sept. 14. Tuesday’s election is the state’s first recall election since the high profile 2003 recall election in which action star Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, won against then-Governor Gray Davis, a Democrat. The celebrity nature of that election generated an unusually high voter turnout — around 61%, according to exit polls — for a special election, setting a profound expectation for the recall effort against Newsom. Early in the election cycle, the recall effort seemed like a performative call from Republicans to California voters who may have been unhappy with the Newsom administration’s handling of the state’s major issues, including homelessness, taxes and the COVID-19 response.
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Leylah Fernandez heads to US Open final by MOMAR
G. VISAYA
AJPress
IT’S going to be a battle of the teens at the U.S. Open Finals this weekend in New York as Leylah Fernandez of Canada and Emma Raducanu of Great Britain won their respective semifinal matches on Thursday, Sept. 9. The last time two teens duked it out for the championship was in 1999 between Martina Hingis and Serena Williams. “I think I’ve been doing some things incredible. I don’t know. It’s like I think one word that really stuck to me is ‘magical’ because not only is my run really good but also the way I’m playing right now,” Fernandez, playing in her seventh major tournament, u PAGE A3 said in her post-match interview.
Fernandez who turned 19 on Monday, Sept. 6 beat No. 2 seed Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-4 to earn the first finals berth. She is the fourth Canadian male or female to make a major final joining Eugenie Bouchard (2014 Wimbledon), Milos Raonic (2016 Wimbledon), and Bianca Andreescu, who won the 2019 U.S. Open. Born to an Ecuadorian immigrant and a Toronto-born Filipina, Fernandez began making her mark last week at the U.S. Open after she won over former champions and top-ranked players. A day before she turned 19, Fernandez’s fairy tale journey progressed as she advanced to the quarterfinals after defeating 19-year-old Leylah Fernandez, who is Filipina-Ecuadorian Canadian, beat No. 2 seed Aryna 16th seed Angelique Kerber, a three-time Sabalenka of Belarus 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-4 to earn the first finals berth on Thursday, September Grand Slam winner who last won the tour- 9. She faces fellow teen player Emma Raducanu of Great Britain. AJPress photo by Troi Santos u PAGE A3
Pacquiao to announce 2022 election plans by Sept. 19 Duterte accepts VP bid in 2022 elections by RITCHEL
MENDIOLA AJPress
by JAVIER JOE ISMAEL ManilaTimes.net
PHILIPPINE Senator Emmanuel “Manny” Pacquiao will decide on his presidential bid in the upcoming 2022 elections on or before the September 19 national assembly of his wing of the Partido ng Demokratikong Pilipino –Lakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban), according to Ronwald “Ron” Munsayac, party spokesman and executive director. In a virtual press conference via the zoom platform, Munsayac told reporters that Pacquiao, the party president, is guided by his three options: a run for the presidency, re-election as senator and retirement from politics. The party spokesman added that come September 19, the Pacquiao wing of the PDP-Laban is set to proclaim the senator as its presidential bet in the 2022 national elections but will respect and support his deciSenator Emmanuel Pacquiao
ManilaTimes.net file photo
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President Rodrigo Duterte
PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte has formally accepted his nomination for vice president by the Partido Demokratiko PilipinoLakas ng Bayan (PDP-Laban). In his speech during the PDP-Laban’s national convention and proclamation of its candidates for the 2022 elections, the chief executive thanked his party for nominating him as its official vice presidential candidate. “No words can express my gratitude for your continued trust and confidence in my leadership and for nominating me as the party’s official vice presidential candidate in the 2022 elections,” Duterte said Wednesday, September 8. “Thank you for the nomination. I am hopePhilstar.com file photo u PAGE A7