San Francisco Edition -- October 14 -- 20, 2016

Page 1

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

w w w. a s i a n

.com T H E F I L I P I N O A M E R I CA N C O M M U N I T Y N E WS PA P E R

Volume 15 - No. 42 • 3 Sections – 22 Pages

1799 Old Bayshore Hwy, Suite 136, Burlingame, CA 94010 • Tel: (650) 689-5160 • Fax: (650) 239-9253 • www.asianjournal.com

USA

DATELINE Calif. infant care now costs as much as Univ. of Calif. tuition FROM THE AJPRESS NEWS TEAM ACROSS AMERICA

PALO ALTO, California — Parents in California are hit hard in the wallet not only when their kids head out to college, but also in the first two years of their children’s lives. According to the latest data on Kidsdata, the state’s parents spent an average of $13,327 per year to send their infants to a childcare center in 2014, the same year that University of California tuition and fees hit $13,222. Nationally, childcare for children below age five has also exceeded that of in-state college tuition. When broken down by county, San Francisco Bay Area counties had the highest costs of infant care, with Marin County leading the pack at more than $18,000 per year, while more rural counties in far northern California and the Central Valley had the lowest costs for infant childcare, at less than $12,000 per year. Center-based infant care costs in the state made up an estimated 14 percent of the median annual income for married couples and 45 percent for single parents in 2014. In 2014,

O C T O BE R 1 4 - 2 0 , 2 0 1 6

Also published in LOS ANGELES, ORANGE COUNTY/INLAND EMPIRE, LAS VEGAS, NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY

Palace letter to UN probers: Allow Duterte to ask questions first Letter sent to world body

by NESTOR

CORRALES Inquirer.net

THE United Nations (UN) officials who will come to the Philippines to investigate alleged extrajudicial killings should be able to answer questions from President Rodrigo Duterte under oath. “Since it is this administration that is maligned as being behind these extrajudicial killings, due

President Rodrigo Duterte

process requires that the President of the Philippines Republic, be given the opportunity to propound his own questions which every nation recognizes,” the letter sent to the UN read. “It would be best to put everyone to whom questions are directed to swear under oath that the answers and/or responses they give are the truth and nothing but the truth,” the letter added.

The letter, signed by Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, was dated September 28. Duterte earlier accepted the challenge of the UN to investigate alleged extrajudicial killings under his administration provided they follow Philippine laws and they will also be subjected to questioning. Medialdea said allowing the

u PAGE A2

u PAGE A4

Controversy overshadows substance at second presidential debate STARK differences of temperament and perspective between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump — as well as present and past scandals — characterized the second presidential debate at Washington University in St. Louis on Sunday, October 9. The two candidates did not shake hands at the outset of the debate and repeatedly went past their allotted response time as they defended themselves against sensational and oftentimes personal attacks on each other’s character and fitness for the presidency. Moderators Martha Raddatz and Anderson Cooper were quick to broach emerging controversies and struggled to contain the reactions of both nominees and the audience. Trump offered a fleeting apology in response to a wave of outrage resulting from the release of what has been dubbed the “Trump tape.” In a conversation recorded back in 2005, the Republican nominee told former Access Hollywood reporter Billy Bush that the billionaire’s celebrity status had enabled him to sexually assault women. The Repub-

u PAGE A4

DOT Secretary Wanda Teo

Miss Universe Pia Wurtzback

AJPress photo by Noel Ty

PH CONDUCTS MILITARY EXERCISES WITH US. The Republic of the Philippines and United States conduct amphibious landing exercise at Naval Education and Training Command, San Antonio, Zambales on Friday, Oct. 7. Inquirer.net photo by Nino Jesus Orbeta

Drug cases filed against De Lima, 7 others Dante Jimenez, filed drug charges before the Department of Justice (DOJ), citing the violation of Section 26 (b) of the Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002. The violations cite the attempt or conspiracy in sale, trading, administration, dispensation, delivery, distribution and transportation of any dangerous drug and/or controlled precursor and essential chemical. Other respondents in the com-

by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

THE Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption (VACC) filed a complaint against Senator Leila De Lima and her alleged cohorts for their supposed involvement in the New Bilibid Prison drug trade. On Tuesday, October 11, the VACC, led by its founding chairman and incumbent president

plaint include former Justice undersecretary Francisco Baraan III, former Bureau of Corrections director Franklin Jesus Bucayu, De Lima’s former security aides Joenel Sanchez and Jad de Vera, her former driver Ronnie Dayan, and high-profile inmate Jaybee Sebastian. In their 65-page complaint affidavit, the VACC accused the respondents of “conspiring and

u PAGE A2

Fil-Ams respond to ‘Mail Order Family’ cancellation Advocacy orgs demand a meeting with NBC execs by KLARIZE

MEDENILLA AJPress

New petition calls for cancellation of Miss Universe in PH by DANA

SIOSON AJPress

DESPITE the Philippine Department of Tourism (DOT)’s efforts to quell rumors that the upcoming Miss Universe pageant will be cancelled, a new petition is calling for the latter organization to reconsider hosting the event in the country. The letter, which was addressed to the Miss Universe organizing committee, asked the organization to “not reward a regime that is trying to turn back the clock as far as women’s causes are concerned.” It was also posted on Facebook over the weekend by Annie Serrano, who has previously worked with the United Nations Development Programme, the Global Fund for Women, and the Women’s Crisis

u PAGE A2

83% of Pinoys trust Duterte – SWS survey by CATHERINE

S. VALENTE ManilaTimes.net

MORE Filipinos still trust President Rodrigo Duterte after three months in office despite local and international criticism of his

war on drugs, according to a new Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey. The SWS poll, conducted from September 24 to 27 and published by BusinessWorld on Tuesday,

u PAGE A3

AFTER NBC executives cancelled the projected situational-comedy about a mail-order bride from the Philippines, Filipino activists are continuing to demand an apology. The sitcom — “Mail Order Family” — was to tell the story of a single father of two preteen daughters who orders a mail-order bride from the Philippines, according to Deadline. The show’s pitch sparked outrage for its stereotypical portrayal of Filipinas, and days after the show’s announcement, executives scrapped the development of the project.

Protesters outside NBC Universal

u PAGE A3

Photo courtesy of GABRIELA USA

I C A E L P S S ! L L A F c i t s Fanta

P re

1

s yo ng S u li t

2$

lbs for

WAS

SAVINGS

$0.99 49%

1 P re

!

THURS~WED

Chicken leg Quarter

AJPress photo by Troi Santos

OCT 13-19 ONLY!

s yo ng S u li t

$ 99 Pork WAS

OCT 1316 ONLY!

!

/lb spare SAVINGS

$2.89 31%

WEEKEND SPE CIA THURS ~SUN L!

ribs

Valid at Island Pacific VALLEJO, AMERICAN CANYON, PITTSBURG, ELK GROVE, UNION CITY, SAN JOSE, HAYWARD, FRESNO

THURS~WED

OCT 13-19 ONLY! |

2

$

P re

s yo ng S u li t

WAS

99 Blue

/lb Crab SAVINGS

$2.99 40%

w w w.islandpacificmarket.com

!


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
San Francisco Edition -- October 14 -- 20, 2016 by Asian Journal Community Newspapers - Issuu